Maximal Miniatures features the work of 13 leading contemporary Iranian artists who reimagine the rich visual tradition of the Persian miniature genre through inventive formal techniques, including experimentations with scale, color, composition, figuration, and abstraction. As an art form, the Persian miniature is grounded in a relationship between text and image in which paintings refer to poetic verses, stories from the Book of Kings (Shahnameh), important battles, heroes, and heroines, using a combination of calligraphic lines, architectural forms, and human figures.
Building upon the miniature’s transnational legacy, the featured artists cross multiple boundaries in their work to focus on questions of identity, gender, ecology, diaspora, and the mythologies that form past and present lives. These new interpretations create images that transcend representation and enter into the realm of the surreal, abstract, and otherworldly. By expanding the miniature form beyond its position as an illustrative work tied to the illumination of manuscripts, these artists point to the aesthetic possibilities of the miniature genre and create new maximal works across painting, sculpture, and works on paper.
Watch a guided tour of the works featured in “Maximal Miniatures” by curator Donna Honarpisheh.
Curator
Participating Artists
Reza Derakshani, Parinaz Eleish, Amir H. Fallah, Arghavan Khosravi, Farideh Lashai, Farah Ossouli, Kour Pour, Elham Pourkhani, Shahpour Pouyan, Iman Raad, Bahar Sabzevari, Soraya Sharghi, Mahsa Tehrani.
Watch the panel discussion from the opening night of “Maximal Miniatures,” featuring curator Donna Honarpisheh and two of the artists featured in the show, Parinaz Eleish and Arghavan Khosravi, in conversation with Lyne Sneige, director of MEI’s Arts & Culture Center.
Featured Programming
Azar Nafisi in Conversation: The Role of Literature in Times of Crisis
A special evening with acclaimed author and literary scholar Azar Nafisi, celebrated for her international bestseller, “Reading Lolita in Tehran”.
Looking For Oum Kulthum Film Screening
A screening of Looking for Oum Kulthum (2017), directed by acclaimed Iranian artist and filmmaker Shirin Neshat in collaboration with Shoja Azari.
Woman, Life, Freedom: How the Arts Energized Iran’s Women-Led Uprising
An in-person panel conversation on the role of the arts in Iran’s Woman, Life, Freedom protest movement and the impact it continues to have three years after the death of Mahsa Amini at the hands of Iran’s morality police.