Parviz Tanavoli (Iranian, b. 1937)
Lots are subject to 5% import Duty on the importat… Read more PROPERTY OF AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE COLLECTION
Parviz Tanavoli (Iranian, b. 1937)

The Wall and the Heech

Details
Parviz Tanavoli (Iranian, b. 1937)
The Wall and the Heech
signed, dated and numbered ‘Parviz, 08, 4/5’ (on the base)
bronze
55 7/8in. (142cm.)
Executed in 2008, this work is numbered four from an edition of five
Provenance
Anon. sale, Christie's Dubai, 27 October 2009, lot 100.
Acquired from the above 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. Please note that on 1st of January 2018, the UAE introduced a VAT regime. For all lots, a VAT charge of 5% of the buyer’s premium will be payable unless the lot is correctly exported out of the UAE within 90 days of the date of this auction. For lots marked with the ‘star’ * symbol in the catalogue, an import duty of 5% of the hammer price will be payable if the lot is collected or shipped within the GCC and an additional VAT of 5% will be charged on the duty-inclusive hammer price if the lot is released into free circulation in the UAE. Please see the Conditions of Sale in the sale catalogue for full details. If you are shipping outside of the UAE, you will need to indicate your shipping requirements and residency status to us prior to bidding to secure a VAT refund.
Sale room notice
Please note that this work measures 55 7/8in.(142cm.) and not as stated in the catalogue.

Brought to you by

Michael Jeha
Michael Jeha

Lot Essay

Parviz Tanavoli's works have sometimes been described as "poetry in bronze". As one of the founders of the Saqqakhaneh School, a neo-traditionalist movement, he believes that sculpture is a kind of poetry. As he says "I wrote my poetry on the surface of the sculpture". For Tanavoli, bronze is the most appropriate material for his sculptural poetry. The main series of Tanavoli's sculptures are Heechs, Poets, Lovers and most notably the Walls, which is exceptionally combined with his Heech in the dazzling piece that is presented here.

While the Heech series seems to be Tanavoli's most famous works, the monumental series of bronzes, the Wall, represents the sculptor’s greatest and most mature achievement. Cast on a wall, the shapely silhouette inspired a relief-like homage. Tanavoli has long been inspired by the word Heech, the Farsi word for "nothing", which has created in numerous and ever more ambitious forms. Comprising three letters in Farsi, to him, the word symbolizes both ambivalence towards the past and a sense of meaninglessness or dissolution with an inadequate present. It represents his reaction to his environment.

Tanavoli’s interest in the word Heech can be divided into four different elements. The first element being mysticism, as it enhances Tanavoli's fascination with the Heech, but he was also drawn to its calligraphic shape because of its resemblance to the human body. The second element is what the word means to him personally. Heech in the hands of Tanavoli means everything; it is fascinating and flexible. It asserts that God is permanent, while everything else has no true substance. It symbolizes the verdict of final condemnation and the powerlessness of mankind.

The third element is what the word means to him as a sculptor. The word Heech, if given dimension from a sculptor's point of view, will be realised as one of the most artistic combinations that the three Farsi letters have made. Only a sculptor can alter the perception of and make various attractive forms that somehow refer to the human being: 'If the astonishing resemblance between a Heech and a human being did not exist, I would have never involved myself in making it', says Tanavoli.

Last but not least, the fourth element of Tanavoli’s fascination with the word is that it also relates on social and political dimensions. For Tanavoli, Heech is the mirror of his time, a form that reflects the events he faces or witnesses. Numerous variations appear of this single word, alone, or in a cage, or together with its beloved are a few to mention. Though it is hard to interpret or translate them in words, one can trace their routes and mystical meanings in the social context of the artist’s life.

By creating his sculptures and thus disclosing his inner world, Tanavoli reveals his emotion and ideas, and at the same time hides these revelations behind the veil of abstraction. In the present work, The Wall and the Heech, the Heech figure is placed between two walls in horizontal direction as though it is being pressed under a heavy press machine. Here the surface of the sculpture is void of any texture or calligraphic elements, often seen in his other walls. By reducing his vocabulary to this versatile anthropomorphous figure, Tanavoli is, in his own way, reacting to the calligraphic excess of the day exploring the formal, the aesthetic and narrative power of a seemingly simple image.

More from Dubai: Post War and Contemporary Art

View All
View All