Bahman Mohasses

Bahman Mohassess (Persian: بهمن محصص) (March 1931 Rasht, Iran – 28 July 2010 Rome, Italy), dubbed by some as the "Persian Picasso", was an Iranian painter, sculptor, translator, and theatre director. His oeuvre comprises paintings, sculptures and collages. He was also a celebrated translator of literary works. His works are highly collected and extremely rare. He is said to have destroyed many of his own works, and those that become available at auction are now highly sought after.

Bahman Mohassess
Born(1931-03-01)1 March 1931
Rasht, Iran
Died28 July 2010(2010-07-28) (aged 79)
Rome, Italy
NationalityIran, Italy
Known forpainter, sculptor, translator, theatre director
Websitehttp://bahmanmohassess.com/

Early life

Bahman Mohasses was born in 1931 in Rasht, Iran. The Mohasses house consisted of approximately 15 families who were land owners of Lahijan and were in the trade of tea and silk and lived in the Pordsar neighborhood of Lahijan. According to Hossein Mahjoobi, "All Mohasseses had strange personalities, but Bahman seemed to be the most complex and unique of them."[1] In his autobiographical documentary Fifi Howls from Happiness, Mohasses mentions that he is descended from the Mongols on his father's side and the Qajars on his mother's side.

At age 14 he learned painting by apprenticing with Seyyed Mohammed Habib Mohammedi,[2] who had studied at the Russian Academy of Arts. He moved with his family from Rasht to Tehran, where he attended Tehran's Faculty of Fine Arts. During the same period he joined the "Cockfight Art and Culture Society" (Anjoman-e Khorous Jangi), established by Jalil Ziapour, and was, for some time, the editor of the literary and art weekly "Panjeh Khoroos" (Rooster Foot).[3] Through this period, he was part of an avant-garde artistic movement, which included his good friend Nima Yooshij, known as the 'father of modern Persian poetry'; along with Sohrab Sepehri, Houshang Irani and Gholamhossein Gharib, who were all considered progressive artists of their time.[4] In 1954 he moved to Italy to study at the Fine Art Academy of Rome.[3]

Personal life

In 1977, he married Nezhat-al-Molook, the daughter of his father's cousin, who was a teacher in Bandar-e-Anzali and later became the head of the Teaching College for Women. She died of brain cancer around 1998.[5]

Mohasses said he was proud of his homosexuality and lived it fully.[6] He was a cousin of the celebrated Iranian illustrator and cartoonist, Ardeshir Mohasses, residing in New York.

Career

He returned to Iran in 1964 and participated in Venice, São Paulo and Tehran Biennale. Mohasses directed plays, including Pirandello's Henry IV at Goethe Institute and Ghandriz Hall in Tehran. He also translated books of a number of authors, including Eugène Ionesco, Malaparte and Pirandello.

He stayed in Iran until 1968, before returning to Rome 1954, where he received commissions for statutes to be placed in Tehran. Some of his public works in Iran were destroyed or damaged after the Islamic Revolution, with the artist subsequently destroying all his remaining works in Iran.[2] He occasionally travelled to Iran and died in self-imposed seclusion in Rome in 2010.

Legacy

"Irreverent and uncompromising, a gay man in a hostile world, Mohassess had a conflicted relationship with his homeland—revered by elites in the art scene and praised as a national icon, only to be censored later by an oppressive regime. Known for his iconoclastic art as well as his scathing declarations, Mohasses abandoned the country over 30 years ago for a simple, secluded life in Italy."[7] Mohasses, unlike many of his contemporaries, did not make references to Persian artistic traditions and had a modern outlook. His paintings and sculptures depicted mythical Minotaurs and creatures out of nightmares in vast deserts of hopelessness.[3] After the Iranian revolution of 1979 he destroyed some of his work.

In the marketplace, his artworks range from US$50,000 up to $1M USD for the extremely rare pieces that are thought to have been destroyed, aside from a couple that are owned by private collectors, such as his painting "Requiem Omnibus". Many of his surviving pieces have been kept privately by collectors. Some of his most sought after and popular paintings (among others) are "Fifi Howls from happiness" and "Requiem Omnibus" (death of Martin Luther King ), which are supposedly owned by a private collectors.

In the media

In 2013, Mitra Farahani wrote and directed the documentary Fifi Howls from Happiness (original title: Fifi az khoshhali zooze mikeshad) in which she interviews Bahman Mohasses in the room of the hotel he had secluded himself. The film, which ends abruptly with Mohasses beginning to die from lung cancer literally on camera, explores the enigma of this provocative artist and presents a "final biography, in his own words and on his terms."[7]

See also

References

  1. ""بهمن محصص" در غبار ستاره‌ها به ابدیت پیوست". lahig.ir. Archived from the original on 9 March 2016. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
  2. "Biography". Archived from the original on 2 November 2014. Retrieved 2 November 2014.
  3. "Mohasses, Bahman" in The Iranian Modern Art Movement: The Iranian Collection of the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, (Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art: Tehran, 2006), page 310.
  4. "Mohasses, Progressive and Recluse" (Mohasses' obituary on BBC Persian) (in Persian)
  5. "خاندان محصص-پایگاه مجلات تخصصی نور". noormags.ir (in Persian). Retrieved 8 March 2016.
  6. Dehghan, Saeed Kamali (10 March 2017). "Francis Bacon and gay Iranian artist Bahman Mohasses shown in Tehran". the Guardian. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  7. "Fifi Howls From Happiness – Music Box Films". Retrieved 2 November 2014.
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