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First Person Artist: Defiant Iranian Painter Abelina Galustian

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  • First Person Artist: Defiant Iranian Painter Abelina Galustian

    First Person Artist: Defiant Iranian Painter Abelina Galustian

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kimberly- brooks/first-person-artist-defi_b_74811.html
    Poste d December 1, 2007 | 08:00 AM (EST)


    First Person Artist is a weekly column by artist Kimberly Brooks in
    which she provides commentary on art and the creative process and
    showcases artists' work from around the world. This week's artist is
    Tehran-born Abelina Galustian.


    It has been six years since the U.S. congratulated itself for
    "liberating the women of the Taliban", and one week since a
    nineteen-year-old girl and gang-rape victim was ordered the penalty of
    200 lashes in Saudi Arabia for the act she allegedly caused because she
    was caught sitting in a car with a man who was not her relative.


    "The Whole Story" Oil on 16 Canvases. Kimberly Brooks.

    As an artist and woman growing up in the West, one of the towers that
    fell on 9-11 was my view of what it meant to view and create art. After
    the cascade of news stories that brought front and center how my
    sisters throughout the world live in what I consider to be oppressive
    misogynistic cultures, I thought deeply about what it must be like
    where there is no visual representational art, where women are covered
    from head to toe and not allowed to be seen let alone depicted in any
    form, where billboards also have the female entirely blackened in
    silhouette and western art history text books are considered
    "pornographic". The closest I've come to the Middle East is relatively
    progressive Dubai--the UAE has just made a deal with the Louvre Museum
    in Paris to build a branch in the tourist-driven area. And even though
    you can find a forty foot high image of Paris Hilton in the Guess Jeans
    store at the United Arab Emirate's Mall (this is progress!), outside
    the mall there's not a painting or photograph of any woman in sight
    except for the framed photographs of the men who rule the country and
    some abstract designs in all the hotel lobbies. It's really really
    strange.

    Suddenly late 20th century notions that say, figurative painting was
    dead, or that women were finally breaking though the glass canvas of
    the art world, seemed quaint. So for me as an artist, the act of
    painting figures, nudes - especially women - takes on another meaning
    and also an act of defiance.

    One step forward. Two steps back.

    In 2003, an underground feminist art exhibition entitled "Women Talking
    Back" featured work for and by women showed in Tehran. One of the
    artists in that exhibition was Abelina Galustian. In her series of
    paintings entitled The Veil Series, she depicts women wearing lingerie
    and high heels along with the burka. The curator of the show was
    briefly imprisoned and all of the paintings were confiscated
    permanently. Shown here are photographs of the paintings which are all
    that remain.


    Abelina Galustian, Photographs of confiscated paintings from "The Veil
    Series," oil and acrylic on canvas, 2003
    In her recent series entitled Womansword, Galustian looks to classic
    19th Century Orientalist painters. She recreates detailed photorealist
    paintings reversing the gender. In doing so, she undermines the
    traditional dynamic of the male gaze and the viewing process while
    pointing to contemporary issues of representation, and the
    neo-Orientalism rampant in the cultures the western world seeks to
    "liberate".

    Kimberly Brooks: Where did you come of age, and when did you start to
    question what women were and were not allowed to do?

    Abelina Galustian: I was born in Tehran, Iran. I am of Armenian
    ethnicity and moved to the U.S. after the Iran/Iraq war. In the
    beginning of third grade in Tehran, my best friend, Rama, and I would
    eavesdrop on women's private conversations [about their Hymen]. I was
    too young to understand why young, single women gave the intactness of
    their hymen such great importance. They shared naughty stories about
    their rendezvous and extracurricular activities as if they were talking
    about a sport - how they finally made the "touch down" without being
    "touched down." These types of "coffee conversations" continued in
    almost every circle and age of women I sat with in my cultural context.

    I now live in the United States. During my last visit to Iran a few
    years ago, I was sitting with a group of very wealthy, educated, single
    women who said the same things I heard during my eavesdropping days. I
    still couldn't understand why they were all [still focusing on acting
    like virgins.] My reaction to this hypocrisy was communicated with the
    Veiled Series. It was a way of telling women to stop interrogating a
    woman's worth by the intactness of her hymen, as it only leads to
    daughters performing virginity and sons who only accept virgins (or at
    least they think they're getting virgins) for wives.

    KB: What was the spark that led specifically to the Womansword series?

    AG: In February 2000, I was in a New Haven bookstore in Connecticut. I
    noticed a center display of books about the Middle East. One book in
    particular caught my eye with its painting by Jean-Leon Gerome entitled
    "The Slave Market." Although I had seen Gerome's painting on many
    different occasions since studying art in America, it was at that point
    when I noticed for the first time, the message Gerome intended in his
    composition. Gerome who is a hyper-Realist and a stickler for correct
    proportions, painted the hand of the nobleman who is purchasing the
    slave girl, about three times bigger proportionally. I was so appalled
    by Gerome's symbolism that I decided to give a critical response to
    this painting.


    Left: Jean-Leon Gerome, The Slave Market, 1867, oil on canvas. Right:
    Abelina Galustian, The Slave Market: Womansword 2000, oil and acrylic
    on canvas.
    AG: I purposely chose the Orientalist style and Gerome's painting by
    reason of its immediate encroachment to the senses. It was necessary
    for this particular body of work to retain a direction of communication
    that would be recognizable, distinguishable, and straightforward. The
    Womansword series of paintings counterclaim some of the socially
    ascribed roles through the switching of gender roles, a switch that may
    at first be read as subtle but actually acknowledges a female's
    ownership of her body and debunks its male control.


    Left: Stanislas von Chlebowski. Purchasing a slave, oil on canvas,
    signed and dated 1879 (36.75 x 28.50 in). Right: Abelina Galustian
    Purchasing a slave: The Womansword, acrylic and oil on canvas, 2002 (5
    x 6 ft).
    In nineteenth-century orientalist works, one theme that was given an
    encore was the captive woman. The harem and slave-market themes were
    exploited by various artists. The most distinguished and famous of the
    Orientalist paintings is Jean Leon Gerome's "The Slave Market" which
    shows how easily Orientalism of the day could be combined with the
    taste for violated innocence and female subjection. Since these chosen
    depictions are almost iconic, quoting from them with alterations that
    are explicitly construed as political, generates a double-take and
    immediate scrutiny from the viewer.


    A close-up detail from Galustian's Purchasing a slave: The Womansword,
    acrylic and oil on canvas, 2002
    KB: What do you seek, ultimately, from your viewers?

    AG: As a feminist artist, I seek to expose seemingly archaic beliefs
    that are only loosely hidden behind the mask of political correctness.
    Works that are tacitly looked upon as classic works of beauty and truth
    in the artistic canon, interestingly enough, become works of
    irreverence and perversity once the genders are switched.

    KB: As an artist who also deals with female/male issues, I find myself
    not wanting to be known solely as a feminist painter, yet you claim it
    prominently in your description of yourself. Do you ever worry about
    being ghettoized as such?

    AG: No. Being "ghettoized" for being a feminist artist is not an issue
    for me. Everything that revolves in and around my work stem from
    women's issues. But Middle-Eastern feminist awareness is not always
    parallel to the West's understanding of feminism. In my work, female is
    not just gender but location, therefore, when talking/painting about
    the female-feminine and male/masculine I'm also talking about the East
    and West. At the end of the day, it is my work that speaks, not my
    label.


    Artist Abelina Galustian
    Born in Tehran with family roots in Tabriz, Abelina Galustian
    immigrated to the U.S. after the Iran/Iraq War. Here, she earned her
    MFA in studio arts at Cal State LA, her MA in art history at UCSB, and
    she is also currently pursuing her PhD in art history at UCSB.
    Galustian's work has shown in solo and group exhibits internationally
    and domestically. Likewise, she has been a featured artist and lecturer
    featuring her own work and topics such as transnational identities,
    Neo-Orientalism, and performing culture in Toronto, Dubai, and
    California. www.womansword.com
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