Mahmood Sabzi
Elusive
Recollections
The Art of
Mahmood Sabzi
Interpretatively
speaking the
teleology or the
end result of
Sabzi’s work is
abstraction. His
paintings, while
graphically
objective and
figurative,
nevertheless,
seek release
from the narrow
confines of
reality. To
carefully read
his art is to
decipher the
ouroboros
structure that
begins as
seemingly real
and ends
conceptually in
abstraction.
Thus, the
implications of
his works are
broad, universal
and
metaphysical.
His device for
abstraction is
subtle, for the
means by which
he structures
and creates this
abstraction is
through the
intermingling of
disparate
cultural symbols
that bespeak the
elusive
narratives of
transcendental
identity and
belief. To put
it differently,
as much as the
symbols in his
works are
temporal and
contextual,
these symbols,
by addressing
the
mythic-narrative
signs rise above
the daily
experiences and
the functionally
known. Sabzi’s
images are often
culled from the
Western and
Eastern artistic
repertoire
which, when
conjoined,
appear as
distinctly alien
outlooks, and
thus not
surprisingly,
these designs
allude to the
interminable and
unbounded
possibilities of
being. It is
this quality
more than any
other that makes
these
recollections
and
reformulations
in his art
elusive and thus
abstract.
His most recent
work “The Edge”
is an apt
example to
discuss. Here, a
miniature
painting,
enclosing a
Western abstract
design, is
superimposed
upon an English
dictionary’s
page. These
Western and
Eastern forms,
implicit of
separate grounds
of interiority,
undermine,
deconstruct and
subvert one
another. The
relation of
these forms may
only be
understood as
metalinguistic
or metamorphic
and as an
abstract frame
of reference.
Moreover, here
the text, often
an indispensable
facet of Sabzi’s
art
(traditionally
functioning as
the
object-language
or as the
designated key
to elucidate and
clarify) turns
irrelevant, moot
and therefore,
furthers the
sense of
abstraction in
this work.
Moreover,
practically in
all of Sabzi’s
art the texts
serve as a
reminder that
language, the
so-called
unifying
principle, is
itself an
abstract device.
That the ability
of language to
read forms and
emotions across
cultural zones
is minimal if
not altogether
impossible.
The
inviolability
expressed
through language
and forms is
quite touching
as the separate
and distinct
spheres intermix
without
abandoning their
original
attributes and
cultural
integrity. It is
as if the worlds
may meet in a
crucible but
never integrate
or unify. And
here arises
another
interpretation.
These are works
of art based on
works of art.
Sabzi conflates
the very
artistic-mythic
images of vastly
disparate
cultures and
unites them,
though they
appear as odd
bedfellows. Thus
these are the
clash of visions
and the clash of
imaginations
that lead to
re-evaluations
of all sorts. It
seems, through a
reading of his
art, that for
Sabzi myths, far
more than “What
Is Really
There,”
determine the
shape of man’s
fate and Being.
Looking at these
works one cannot
help but feel
the touch of
lost worlds,
surviving as
symbols, and
thus the feel of
meanings whose
concrete faces
have long been
effaced. In the
words of Italo
Calvino, …we
measure
ourselves
against
something else
that is not
present,
something else
that belongs to
the immaterial,
invisible world
because it can
only be thought,
imagined, or
because it was
once and is no
longer, past,
lost
unattainable in
the land of the
dead. (From: If
on a winter’s
night a
traveler, 1979).
For Sabzi, the
intermix of
signs and
symbols is
therefore a way
of opting for
art rather than
life or
concealing life
beneath the mask
of art. One must
wonder if the
selected symbols
and his method
do not hide
something
fundamental--
perhaps the pain
of separation--
the kind of pain
that he so
skillfully
depicted in
“Metamorphoses.”
This early
painting is a
masterpiece of
amalgamated
cultural signs
depicting the
agony of
recreating
oneself in a new
world. In the
later works the
motifs fall onto
the canvas
remaining
faithful to
their origins.
These images
unable to merge
and integrate,
leave us
wondering, if it
is not the fear
of the fiery
intermixture
that keeps them
so coolly
together.
On another
level, one may
assume that the
interpretation
of such works as
“Mission
Accomplished I”
and “Mission
Accomplished II”
or the “Nuns at
Play” is
straight forward
indictments of
capitalism,
colonialism and
religious
gamesmanship.
But it would be
wrong to see
these works as
mimetic and
linear
expressions.
What comes
across is the
illogic of a
world that mixes
and intermixes
random and
wholly unrelated
elements, as
perhaps is also
the way of the
universe.
It is Sabzi’s
recollections
and reflections
that often lead
him to a culling
of images from
various grand
styles. Thus,
for example, the
images of Warhol
or the
miniatures of
various Iranian
periods not only
recall artistic
periods and
achievements but
also evoke
metaphysical
sign-posts of
cultural
identity. These
paintings
essentially
evoke
discourses, be
it directly or
indirectly,
about how the
fate and the
life of man is
measured in art,
and that history
too is a
construct of
aesthetic
preferences. The
message in all
of these
assimilations is
that there is no
pure and
comprehensive
grasp of the
real but
selected
viewpoints.
Examples are
images Marilyn
Monroe
juxtaposed with
oriental signs,
dollar signs,
Disney cartoons,
supersize
hamburgers, and
many more. These
works are all
reminders of how
certain cultural
forms coalesce
with others just
because they are
imbued with new
meanings in
different
settings or
because they
have become
relevant as a
result of the
desires for
acculturation
within a
cultural space.
Expatriated
artists are
often burdened
by the
persistence of
memory. In fact,
far more than
their native
com
patriots. Sabzi
is one of the
artists in exile
and his works
are the
lingering signs
of an unshakable
memory that
constantly
evokes a
romantic vision
of the past. His
relation with
his adopted land
is just as
mythopoeic and
mythic based as
his memory of
his homeland.
His images are
the conflation
of the various
strata of
linguistic and
image
recollections
selected from a
historical pile
that not only
drives his
compulsion to
paint but also
expands the
horizon of our
view of cultural
interactions.
Ancient and
modern run
together and do
so by random
assimilations.
Thus the works
are polyphonic
with distinct
memory layers
and distinct
music of their
own. And here
our ability to
separate the
real and the
imagined; the
real and the art
becomes at times
almost
impossible.
The question is
what results
from these
random
juxtapositions?
Primarily it is
an act of
shattering the
assumed unity
and purity of
life and
asserting the
unpredictable
flow of energies
across borders
and time zones.
The result, as
in the works of
a few others, is
fact and fiction
in the same
space, reality
and myths
embodied as one.
But above all
his art is about
a universe where
unrelated strata
merge and
confrontations
with reality and
facts turn into
literary
exercises. Above
all Sabzi’s art
liberates the
image from the
syntax that
creates meaning
within it. This
liberation is
ultimately the
open-ended play
of signs and
symbols far
beyond what is
on the canvas.
Abbas Daneshvari
January, 2015
|