Fateh Moudarres (Syrian, 1922-1999)
Lots are subject to 5% import Duty on the importat… Read more
Fateh Moudarres (Syrian, 1922-1999)

Untitled

Details
Fateh Moudarres (Syrian, 1922-1999)
Untitled
signed in Arabic, signed and dated 'Moudarres 1965' (lower right)
oil on canvas
35 3/8 x 27½in. (90 x 70cm.)
Painted in 1965
Provenance
Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner.
Special notice
Lots are subject to 5% import Duty on the importation value (low estimate) levied at the time of collection shipment within UAE. For UAE buyers, please note that duty is paid at origin (Dubai) and not in the importing country. As such, duty paid in Dubai is treated as final duty payment. It is the buyer's responsibility to ascertain and pay all taxes due.

Brought to you by

James Lees
James Lees

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

'By capturing it and registering it, I protect the human heart and soul behind it; I give the woman a space to exist and to be eternal. I surround her with my own world where she becomes a heroin of the Euphrates, where she plays part in the old Syrian mythology; she is celebrated in my own legend. By giving her a place back in the old history of my land, I invite the modern day viewer to appreciate her status, and to link it to our current day life so maybe the modern man will feel ashamed and rethink his values of women and gives them back a fair treatment and their right place in the new society'
(Fateh Moudarres in an interview with Syrian artist Rida Hushus).

The recurring female faces in Moudarres' oeuvre is mostly inspired from Syrian women he would meet time and time again on crossroads. These faces are etched in his memory from his childhood. Such faces may be directly inspired from his own entourage whom he depicts with a detached gaze, as if always looking up to an absent horizon or metaphorically to the future ahead of them.
This creates a feeling of powerlessness at the mercy of a man. Moudarres was a great supporter and advocate of Women's Rights as he was deeply affected by the sadness that dominated his mother's personality due to her personal suffering throughout her own marriage. This simplistic approach to paint a face, with its lines and patches of shadow and looks somehow mysterious is a testimony of a reality that is beautified.

More from Modern and Contemporary Arab,Iranian and Turkish Art Part II

View All
View All