Nogol
Mazlumi
Exhibition
titled:
One
thousand,
three
hundred
sixty
Hours
and
twenty-one
minutes
Opening
on
6th
March
2015
It
has
taken
Nogol
Mazloumi,
exactly
One
thousand
three
hundred
sixty
Hours
and
twenty-one
minutes
to
complete
the
startlingly
powerful
drawings
of
this
exhibition.
It
is
an
archaic
attitude,
one
that
is
retention
of
an
age
old
practice
of
Iranian
artists
and
their
interest
in
pen
and
ink
drawing
which
is
well
documented
to
Il-Khanid
period
(1256-1353
AD).
For
centuries
Iranian
artists,
in
their
solitude,
have
created
marvelous
imagery,
a
separate
world
where
they
have
found
the
redeeming
answer
to
brutality
chaos
and
frustration
that
seems
always
to
have
been
a
part
of
daily
life.
Nogol
Mazloumi
is
preoccupied
with
notion
of
death
and
non
existence.
For
the
catalogue
she
writes:The
notion
of
before
and
after
life
which
is
incomprehensible
to
us,
is
void.
Death
is a
boundless
void,
and
in
its
intervals
life
exists.
Death
is
not
performed
and
is
not
a
position,
it’s
devoid
of
any
act.
But
it
contains
all
acts
because
it
engulfs
life.
In
reality
It
is
life
that
happens.
So
in
this
way
death
is
both
life
and
it
is
not.
In
these
breath
taking
drawings,
artist
creates
life
and
beauty
out
of
her
fixation
with
death.
Through
her
lines
music
flows
and
the
harmony
which
the
eye
enjoys
as
it
passes
to
and
fro
over
the
compositions
is
soothing.
Here
is
Phoenix
rising
from
ashes,
phoenix
who
is
believed
to
possess
the
knowledge
of
all
times
and
the
netherworld.
From
ashes
she
arises
to
create
life
and
wonderment.
She
plunges
in
to
flames
to
be
purified
and
to
rise
again.
It
is
this
self
renewing
quality
in
Iranian
art
that
has
been
the
merit
and
source
of
its
survival
through
dark
times
with
artists
who
have
boldly
faced
their
own
demons
and
have
risen
above
expectations,
each
time
stronger,
each
time
mightier.
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