Self as Archive: Fragments in a Persian Mirror
“Exhibition View”
The Fifth Parallel Gallery, Regina, SK, Canada, April 2025
Self as Archive: Fragments in a Persian Mirror
Artist statement
This exhibition brings together a series of paintings, drawings, and a photographic intervention that reflect the ongoing transformation of my artistic practice—from classical academic realism to a more personal and symbolic language of self-representation. While rooted in the formal traditions of European and Persian painting, these works shift away from idealized figuration to engage with vulnerability, fragmentation, and the complexities of identity.
The concept of the “archive” in this exhibition is not limited to history or documentation—it is internal, embodied, and emotional. My self-portraits function as living records of memory, exile, and masculinity, each one layered with references to Iranian mythology, political turmoil, and personal loss. They are shaped by both the nostalgia of a homeland left behind and the reality of navigating new cultural geographies as an immigrant artist. In this mirror—fragmented, poetic, and sometimes distorted—I attempt to see myself more clearly, and to invite others to do the same.
Throughout the exhibition, the figure recurs: sometimes monumental, sometimes vulnerable, caught between action and reflection. Paintings such as Flames of Agency, The Second Skin, and I Dreamed of Bones explore the psychological weight of inherited roles and silenced histories. Others, like Weight of Ashes and Witness, address the quiet residue of trauma and the tension between presence and absence. The recurring motif of the body—masked, mirrored, wounded—becomes a site of negotiation between private memory and collective experience.
This exhibition also includes sketchbooks and a series of seventy small drawings that form an auxiliary archive. These works offer glimpses into my daily process, emotional states, and spontaneous gestures—revealing the raw foundation beneath the finished canvases. They are less about resolution and more about continuity, marking a passage through time, space, and transformation.
Self as Archive: Fragments in a Persian Mirror is a search for coherence amid dislocation. It is a visual testimony to the persistence of selfhood in the face of rupture, and to the possibility of art as both refuge and resistance. Through these works, I ask: How does one carry a homeland within the body? What does it mean to look at oneself through history’s broken mirror?
Flames of Agency
2024
Oil and acrylic on canvas
198 x 198 cm / 78″ x 78″
Collection: City of Regina Civic Art Collection, Regina, SK
Based on the Iranian myth of Siavash
Siyâvash (Persian: سیاوش), also spelled Siyâvoš or Siavash (سياووش), is a major figure in the Shahnameh. He is introduced by Ferdowsi as the son of Kay Kāvus, who reigns as Shah in the earliest days of Greater Iran for over a century. His name means “the one with black stallions” after his horse Shabrang Behzād (شبرنگ بهزاد, lit. ’night-coloured purebred’), who accompanies him during a trial of righteousness.
He meets his stepmother Sudabeh, who develops a burning lust for him and begins devising stratagems to lure him into intercourse. However, Siyâvash repeatedly rejects her advances and also strikes down her suggestion to kill his father so that they can rule together. Fearing that he might inform the Shah and have her executed, Sudabeh falsely accuses Siyâvash of raping her. Hearing his plea, the Shah forces him to prove himself by riding through a colossal mountain of fire. Siyâvash overcomes this trial and is ruled innocent. In Iranian literature, Siyâvash is widely regarded as a symbol of innocence. His defense of his own chastity, self-imposed exile, constancy in love for his wife, and ultimate execution at the hands of his adopted hosts have become intertwined with Iranian mythology over the millennia. His name is also linked with the mythical growth of plants.
Flames of Agency, Details
2024
Oil and acrylic on canvas
198 x 198 cm / 78″ x 78″
Self as Archive: Fragments in a Persian Mirror
“Exhibition View, West wall”
The Fifth Parallel Gallery, Regina, SK, Canada, April 2025
The size of each work is stated separately in the image of the work itself
The Desert’s Wardrobe
2025
Oil on canvas
91.4 x 60.9 cm / 36″ x 24″
Collection: Saskatchewan Arts Board (SK Arts), Regina, SK
Unsent
2025
Oil on canvas
101.6 x 76.2 cm / 40″ x 30″
Collection: Saskatchewan Arts Board (SK Arts), Regina, SK
Walking Back Home, “After Coma, by Justin Mortimer.”
2025
Oil on canvas
91.4 x 60.9 cm / 36″ x 24″
In this piece, I explored the visual language of contemporary British painter Justin Mortimer, reinterpreting a fragment of one of his works.
Winter Companion
2025
Oil on canvas
30 x 40 cm / 11.8″ x 15.7″
Self as Archive: Fragments in a Persian Mirror
“Exhibition View”
The Fifth Parallel Gallery, Regina, SK, Canada, April 2025
The size of each work is stated separately in the image of the work itself
Wardrobe
2025
Oil on canvas
58.4 x 73.6 cm / 23″ x 29″
Collection: Saskatchewan Arts Board (SK Arts), Regina, SK
Weight of Ashes, The Second Skin, I Dreamed of Bones, and The Anatomy of Renewal, Exhibition View
2024 / 2025
Oil on canvas
The size of each work is stated separately in the image of the work itself.
The Second Skin
2024
Oil and acrylic on canvas
198 x 107 cm / 78″ x 42″
The Second Skin, Details
2024
Oil and acrylic on canvas
198 x 107 cm / 78″ x 42″
The Second Skin, I Dreamed of Bones, and The Anatomy of Renewal
2024 / 2025
Oil on canvas
The size of each work is stated separately in the image of the work itself.
The Second Skin and I Dreamed of Bones, Detail. Exhibition View
2025
Oil on canvas
In the installation of the work in the gallery, the works are leaned against the wall, and these two particular works overlap each other so that the shadow is part of the work.
I Dreamed of Bones, Details
2025
Oil on canvas
198 x 122 cm / 78″ x 48″
The Anatomy of Renewal
2025
Oil on canvas
198 x 84 cm / 78″ x 33″
The Anatomy of Renewal, Details
2025
Oil on canvas
198 x 84 cm / 78″ x 33″
The Right Hand
2024
Oil on canvas
101.6 x 76.2 cm / 40″ x 30″
Loop
2025
Oil on canvas
101.6 x 76.2 cm / 40″ x 30″
The Right Hand and Loop, Exhibition View
2025
Oil on canvas
Eech: 101.6 x 76.2 cm / 40″ x 30″
Self as Archive: Fragments in a Persian Mirror
“Entrance and West Wall, Exhibition View”
The Fifth Parallel Gallery, Regina, SK, Canada, April 2025
Self as Archive: Fragments in a Persian Mirror
“North and West Wall, Exhibition View”
The Fifth Parallel Gallery, Regina, SK, Canada, April 2025
Self as Archive: Fragments in a Persian Mirror
“Entrance, North and West Wall Exhibition View”
The Fifth Parallel Gallery, Regina, SK, Canada, April 2025
Self as Archive: Fragments in a Persian Mirror
“West and South Wall, Exhibition View”
The Fifth Parallel Gallery, Regina, SK, Canada, April 2025
Self as Archive: Fragments in a Persian Mirror
“Exhibition View”
The Fifth Parallel Gallery, Regina, SK, Canada, April 2025
Sketchbook Drawings; a visual record and research
(These works are available in the drawing section with details)
Lovely Rubbish № 1
2020
Oil on canvas (with collage)
140 x 100 cm / 55.1″ x 39.3″
Lovely Rubbish № 2
2020
Oil on canvas (with collage)
150 x 110 cm / 59″ x 43.3″
Lovely Rubbish № 3
2020
Oil on canvas (with collage)
140 x 90 cm / 55.1″ x 35.4″
Lovely Rubbish № 2, Detail
2020
Oil on canvas (with collage)
Full-size painting: 150 x 110 cm / 59″ x 43.3″
Lovely Rubbish № 1, Detail
2020
Oil on canvas (with collage)
Full-size painting: 140 x 100 cm / 55.1″ x 39.3″
Lovely Rubbish № 3, Detail
2020
Oil on canvas (with collage)
Full-size painting: 140 x 90 cm / 55.1″ x 35.4″
Defective cycle
2018
Oil on canvas
80 x 100 cm / 31.4″ x 39.3″
3 Hours Live Model Study
2017
Oil on board
40 x 30 cm / 15.7″ x 11.8″
Untitled, Detail
2019
Oil on canvas
Full-size painting: 100 x 70 cm / 39.3″ x 27.5″
Portrait, Live Model Study
2016
Oil on canvas
60 x 50 cm / 23.6″ x 19.6″
3 Hours Live Model Study
2017
Oil on board
40 x 30 cm / 15.7″ x 11.8″
4 Hours Live Model Study
2017
Oil on board
50 x 40 cm / 19.6″ x 15.7″
3 Hours Live Model Study
2017
Oil on board
45 x 35 cm / 17.7″ x 13.7″
3 Hours Live Model Study
2017
Oil on board
40 x 30 cm / 15.7″ x 11.8″
3 Hours Live Model Study
2017
Oil on board
40 x 30 cm / 15.7″ x 11.8″
3 Hours Live Model Study
2017
Oil on gessoed paper
40 x 30 cm / 15.7″ x 11.8″
3 Hours Live Model Study
2017
Oil on board
40 x 30 cm / 15.7″ x 11.8″
3 Hours Live Model Study
2017
Oil on board
40 x 35 cm / 15.7″ x 13.7″
Portrait, Live Model Study
2016
Oil on board
40 x 30 cm / 15.7″ x 11.8″
Being Metamorphosis (Triptych)
2016
Oil on canvas
300 x 140 cm / 118.1″ x 55.1″
Being Metamorphosis (Triptych)
2016
Oil on canvas
300 x 140 cm / 118.1″ x 55.1″
Being Metamorphosis (Centre Panel Detail)
2016
Oil on canvas
Full-size painting: 300 x 140 cm / 118.1″ x 55.1″
Being Metamorphosis (Drawing Study, Modello)
2016
Wine charcoal on Kraft paper
300 x 140 cm / 118.1″ x 55.1″
Being Metamorphosis (Right Panel Details)
2016
Oil on canvas
Full-size painting: 300 x 140 cm / 118.1″ x 55.1″
Being Metamorphosis (Detail)
2016
Wine charcoal on Kraft paper
Full-size drawing: 300 x 140 cm / 118.1″ x 55.1″
Being Metamorphosis (Detail)
2016
Wine charcoal on Kraft paper
Full-size drawing: 300 x 140 cm / 118.1″ x 55.1″
Permutation № 1
2013
Acrylic on canvas
140 x 120 cm / 55.1″ x 47.2″
Permutation Series
This series explores multiple angles and perspectives to create an unreal, fragmented atmosphere filled with incomplete figures and forms. Through the transformation of subjective expression and the interplay between representation and abstraction, the works evoke a sense of evolution, change, and isolation.
Each piece reflects an inner transition — a state of becoming — where forms emerge and dissolve simultaneously. These works exist in a liminal space, as if completed before full formation, like a malformed fetus in the womb that continues to grow and transform, or a child born prematurely, still in the process of becoming.
The Permutation Series was first exhibited at my Bachelor’s Degree defense exhibition at the University of Tehran, Faculty of Fine Arts, and presented at Tehran Gallery.
Permutation № 2
2013
Acrylic on canvas
140 x 120 cm / 55.1″ x 47.2″
Permutation № 3
2013
Acrylic on canvas
120 x 140 cm / 47.2″ x 55.1″
Permutation № 4
2013
Acrylic on canvas
80 x 140 cm / 31.4″ x 55.1″
Permutation in Cubism
2013
Acrylic on canvas
50 x 50 cm / 19.6″ x 19.6″
In 2013, when I was in the final year of my undergraduate studies at the University of Tehran, Dariush Hosseini resumed teaching painting classes in his studio after a long break. This painting is one of the works I created under his direct supervision during that class.
It began as a study based on Anton van Dyck’s The Crucifixion in St. Rumbold’s Cathedral, Mechelen, focusing on its formal representation. Over time, it took on a more subjective and abstract direction, engaging with contemporary approaches to breaking and reconstructing forms. The process of starting, rebuilding, and transforming the work often reached dead ends or seemed complete, only to shift again and acquire a different essence—sometimes even surprising me as its creator.
I vividly remember how demanding it was to explore new forms and to have the courage to recreate—or at times destroy—shapes until they evolved into entirely new structures, leaving no trace of the original image. The canvas was turned several times, moving from a classical representation toward fragmented forms and mental abstraction.
I believe this work is worth sharing not because it is necessarily a successful painting, but because that period—and Hosseini’s unique approach to teaching and seeing—had a profound influence on my vision and sensibility as a painter.
Permutation № 5
2013
Acrylic on canvas
90 x 90 cm / 35.4″ x 35.4″