Art Histories
2014/ 2015

Combiz Moussavi-Aghdam

Art History and Modern Aesthetics in Iranian Context

The poster of the first Tehran Biennial, 1958
The poster of the first Tehran Biennial, 1958

Combiz Moussavi-Aghdam is researcher at the Education Committee, Association of Iranian Painters and lecturer at the Art University in Tehran. He received his PhD in Art History and Visual Studies at the University of Manchester in 2009. His thesis, titled Entropy: Between Artistic Form and Formlessness; With Special Reference to Contemporary Iranian Art, is about the ways in which the concept of entropy could be applied to modern and contemporary art, particularly in Iranian context. Since the end of his PhD, Moussavi-Aghdam has continued to work on the modern narratives of art history and aesthetics in Iran and the ways they have been adopted, reinterpreted and transformed in their new context. His articles on the above topics, have been published in the  British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies and the Arab Studies Journal. In the last two years, he held presentations in Universities in Beirut, Tehran, New York, Bonn and Yerevan.
 

Art History and Modern Aesthetics in Iranian Context

Mapping the historical context in which art history developed in Iran, this project aims to survey the interrelation between the narratives of art history and the ideologies adopted by the Iranian intelligentsia to construct Iran’s identity during the last century. Since the development of modern nation-state in early-twentieth century Iran, artists has produced their art in relation to the “other” West and in search of indigenisation and authenticity. In this research, I intend to portray the ways in which modernist aesthetic values were perceived, appropriated and transformed within the socio-cultural context of modern Iran. I will focus on three historical moments to analyse the construction of art history in Iran: the writings of Western art historians and archaeologists on Iranian art in the second quarter of the twentieth century; the relationship between art historical narratives and intellectual thoughts in 1960s Iran; and the new waves of artistic practice and its consequent shift in theoretical discussions in recent years. My final intention is to publish a book out of several articles on the above-mentioned areas.