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Rapture

United States

1999

9 Min
Black and White
English
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DIR Shirin Neshat

SCR Shoja Azari, Shirin Neshat

Synopsis

Shirin Neshat’s Rapture is both literally and figuratively a separation of genders. Neshat’s film installation consists of two large, opposing projections that depict men and women separated from each other; while polarized both visually and spatially, both are kept locked in a dynamic though subtle interaction that powerfully underscores gender-based inequalities.

Rapture is a poetic and moving 16mm-film installation (presented in laser disc format) addressing traditional gender roles in patriarchal, fundamentalist society, one that Iranian-born Neshat, who has lived in the United States since 1974, has experienced. Visiting her homeland in 1990, after a 12-year absence due to the 1978-79 Islamic Revolution, she was taken aback by the memory of her homeland and the changes she saw in a country that was now so ideologically constricted. Iran had become a country in which contact between the sexes in public spaces was considered taboo. The impact of that visit and the potent influence it has had on the artist’s work comes across unmistakably, without a single word of dialogue.

Shirin Neshat’s work was exhibited at the Whitney, Kwangju, and Sydney Biennial’s in 2000; at Venice Biennale, Carnegie International and The Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1999; and the Tate Gallery of Modern Art, London, and Walker Art Center in 1998. —http://www.absolutearts.com/artsnews/2001/06/09/28677.html

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Shirin Neshat

Shirin Neshat شيرين نشأت (born March 26, 1957 in Qazvin, Iran) is a contemporary visual artist who lives in New York. She is known primarily for her work in film, video and photography.

Neshat’s parents were upper middle-class. Her father was a well-respected physician and her mother a homemaker. She grew up in a westernized household that adored the Shah of Iran and his ideologies. Neshat has stated about her father, “He fantasized about the west, romanticized the west, and slowly rejected all of his own values; both my parents did. What happened, I think, was that their identity slowly dissolved, they exchanged it for comfort. It served their class”. As a part of Neshat’s “Westernization” she was enrolled in a Catholic boarding school in Tehran. She found the environment cold and hostile in comparison to her caring family.

Through her father’s acceptance of Western ideologies came an acceptance of a form of western feminism. Neshat’s father encouraged his daughters to… read more

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W184

The Auteurs Daily: Venice and Toronto. Women without Men and Green Days

By David Hudson on September 15, 2009

Shirin Neshat's Women without Men and Hana Makhmalbaf's Green Days are both set in Iran during turbulent periods of that nation's history

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