Harvard Shows Iranian Political Art  
         
         
        May 18, 2007,
        Cambridge, MA -- TMO attended the opening
        reception of a photo exhibit entitled "Walls of
        Martyrdom: Tehran's Propaganda Murals" at Harvard
        University. To show the power of imagery in Iranian
        culture, Fontini Christia displayed photographs of
        Tehran's public murals in an exhibit designed by Ghazal Abbasy
        Asbagh. 
         
         
        Asbagh's husband Alireza Korangy participated in the
        panel, "Murals and Martyrdom in the
        Islamic Republic of Iran."  
         
          
         
        Asbagh and Korangy
        stand  in front of Teheran Mural in the CGIS South
        concourse at 1730 Cambridge St., Cambridge, MA. 
         
        Another panel, "A Comparative Perspective of
        Martyrdom and Propaganda Art in Iraq, Lebanon, and the
        Palestinian Territories" followed. 
         
        The program claims, "The exhibit's primary objective
        is to document and present images that are part of the
        daily urban experience in Tehran
the exhibit also
        aspires to debate and deconstruct
the extent to
        which they express revolutionary fervor and religious
        fundamentalism or merely the regime's anxieties and
        insecurities." 
         
        Some felt the art expresses Iran's "death
        culture." Yet others found that the smiling
        martyr murals clearly celebrate transcendence, like
        the American "Give me liberty or give me
        death."   
         
          
         
        "Martyrdom is the legacy of the Prophet," an
        Islamic pieta, depicts the veiled Prophet Mohammed
        mourning over a young martyr. 
         
          
         
        A young volunteer in the Iran-Iraq war is pictured in a
        field of flowers stretching into the horizon.  
         
          
         
        Iranians remember their war heroes as beautiful souls.
        American war heroes are memorialized with white crosses,
        but seldom remembered so personally.  
         
          
         
        A Palestinian female martyr is honored with a quote,
        "God knows I love my children, but I love martyrdom
        more." The inscription reads: "22 year old
        Palestinian woman, Rima Saleh Ariashi, mother of two
        children, who sought martyrdom in 2004 in occupied
        Palestine that resulted in the death of four
        Zionists."  
         
           
         
        One mural demonstrates the threat of satellite TV. A hand
        reaches out from a satellite dish with a match to burn
        Iranian culture, which is represented by stylized
        flowers, as one might see in a traditional mosque. 
         
        Exhibit designer Asbagh agreed that the some of the
        murals have some similarity to Soviet realist posters.
        She said, "I am happy to bring a little of the real
        Tehran to the USA." 
         
        She has long noticed a major disconnect between the
        reality of Iran and the coverage of Iran in the US
        media. She hopes that this exhibit can help
        Americans to get to know Iranians as people.  
         
        Asbagh mentioned that the Iranian encounter with
        Americans can prove disappointing because Americans tend
        to know so little about the world in general.  
         
        Posted By Joachim Martillo 5/23/2007 07:52:00 PM  
        [EAAZI] Iranian Murals Resistance, Hope,
        Transcendance 
        Background by Gnome 
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