Tanavoli, Parviz

We are Happy Locked Within Holes, 1970

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After studying art in Italy, Tanavoli returned to Tehran in 1960. He soon became Zenderoudi’s accomplice in the Saqqakhaneh venture, developing a distinct form of bronze sculpture that combines modernist impulses with Iranian forms. Building his works incrementally, he employs an artistic vocabulary forged from contemporary tools and artisanal objects: welded faucets, tubes, and grillwork, and the keys and locks he collected in local bazaars. As Fereshteh Daftari writes, “We Are Happy Locked Within Holes evoke[s] a cage or prison tower and invites the viewer … to form a hybrid language that converts a prison into a temple of love.”[1] Here Tanavoli encourages the observer to look beyond the surface into confined spaces where sexuality and love clandestinely survive—in the form of a phallus in one cell and interlaced hands in another.

1. Fereshteh Daftari, “Another Modernism: An Iranian Perspective,” in Picturing Iran: Art, Society and Revolution, ed. Lynn Gumpert and Shiva Balaghi (London: I.B. Tauris, 2002), 77. Reprinted in Modernisms: Iranian, Turkish, and Indian Highlights from NYU’s Abby Weed Grey Collection, ed. Lynn Gumpert (New York: Grey Art Gallery, New York University, in association with Himmer Publishers, 2019), 54.
Medium Bronze on travertine base
Dimensions 30 x 7 1/4 x 10 3/4 in.
Credit Line Grey Art Gallery, New York University Art Collection
Donor Gift of Abby Weed Grey
Object ID G1975.56

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Collection Years: 1970