Williams
College Museum of Art Presents
Antoin Sevruguin and the Persian Image
January 10-May 2, 2004
Download publicity images now
Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) will
present Antoin Sevruguin and the Persian
Image, an exhibition that offers a glimpse
of turn-of-the-20th century Iran through
the eyes of one of that nation’s most
creative photographers, Antoin Sevruguin.
The exhibition was organized by the Smithsonian
Institution Traveling Exhibition Service
(SITES) and will be on view at WCMA from
January 10 to May 2, 2004.
Antoin Sevruguin (late 1830s–1933)
was a celebrated photographer of late nineteenth-century
and early twentieth century Iran. He used
the relatively new medium of photography
to record intriguing images of Iran, its
people, and their culture at a time of significant
change. The exhibition shows how Sevruguin
moved effortlessly back and forth between
Iran and Europe, in the process creating
a diverse body of photographic work that
oscillates between East and West in its subject
matter: veiled women, the shah, court life,
western tourists, common people; and approach:
portraiture, archaeological studies, and
architectural street scenes.
About the Artist
Antoin Sevruguin was an Armenian Christian
who lived most of his life in Tehran and
traveled among the diverse worlds of Iranian
society. Influenced by both Western and
Eastern artistic traditions, Sevruguin
brought a new sense of artistry to Iranian
photography. Sevruguin’s patronage
was equally diverse. He served the royal
court of the shahs and he ran a portrait
studio open to the public. He also journeyed
to sites of Persian civilization to photograph
the evocative ruins of the Iranian past,
such as the ruins of Persepolis and inscriptions
of the lineage and conquests of the reigns
of Darius I and Xerxes I.
Most of Sevruguin’s work was destroyed
during his lifetime as a result of the Iranian
constitutional crisis of 1906 and the civil
unrest that accompanied the transition from
the Qajar to the Pahlavi dynasty. Today,
the Myron Bement Smith Collection of the
Smithsonian’s Arthur M. Sackler Gallery
and Freer Gallery of Art archives houses
one of the world’s largest collections
of surviving work–nearly 700 glass
plate negatives–by this early photographer.
The Arthur M. Sackler Gallery and adjacent
Freer Gallery of Art together form the national
museum of Asian art at the Smithsonian. Further
information can be found at www.asia.si.edu.
Related Exhibitions and Programs
To complement this exhibition, WCMA presents
Forbidden Image? Persian and Mughal Painting
from the Collection. The exhibition, on
view from January 10 to April 25, 2004,
examines a common misconception about Islamic
art—that representation of the human
figure is strictly forbidden. In actuality,
Islamic art has a long, rich tradition
of depicting people. Forbidden Image? will
show that the issue of non-representation
is historically a complex and disputed
issue.
Forbidden Image? will include 12 Persian
and Mughal paintings and drawings ranging
from the 15th to the 19th centuries and depicting
a variety of men and beasts. These works,
which represent highlights of WCMA’s
Islamic holdings, also reflect Antoin Sevruguin’s
study of traditional Persian painting, which
influenced his photography work. Forbidden
Image? Persian and Mughal Painting from the
Collection was organized by Holly Edwards,
Lecturer in Art at Williams College, with
Stefanie Spray Jandl, Andrew W. Mellon Associate
Curator for Academic Programs, in conjunction
with Professor Edwards’s art history
course, "Forbidden Image?"
Complementing these two exhibitions is Charles
Prendergast and Persian Paintings, also drawn
from WCMA’s permanent collection. The
five Charles Prendergast (American, 1863-1948)
works on view show how Prendergast experimented
with stylization, compression of space, and
rich use of gold leaf and color that he so
admired in Persian painting.
Charles Prendergast and Persian Paintings
was organized by Ellery Foutch, Curatorial
Assistant, with Nancy Matthews, Eugenie Prendergast
Senior Curator of 19th and 20th Century Art
and Lecturer in Art.
Dr. Frederick Bohrer, curator of Antoin
Sevruguin and the Persian Image, will be
giving a gallery talk on Thursday, April
29 at noon at Williams College Museum of
Art in conjunction with Antoin Sevruguin
and the Persian Image. Dr. Bohrer, Associate
Professor of Art at Hood College in Frederick,
Maryland, has published widely on the representation
of the Near East in the 19th and early 20th
centuries. He is also a contributor to, and
editor of, the exhibition’s companion
publication.
Publicity Images Available
Publicity images for Antoin Sevruguin and
the Persian Image and other current exhibitions
are available for use. The images include
Veiled Woman with Pearls, Barber Dyeing
Nasir al-din Shah’s Mustache, and
Interior in Gulistan Palace. Images can
be found at www.wcma.org/press.
The Williams College Museum of Art is open
Tuesday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m., and on Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. Admission
is free and the museum is wheelchair accessible.
Contact: Suzanne Augugliaro, Public Relations
Coordinator
413.597.3178; WCMA@williams.edu
www.wcma.org
Each year, SITES shares the wealth of Smithsonian
collections and research programs with millions
of people outside of Washington, D.C. One
of the Smithsonian’s four National
Programs, SITES makes available a wide range
of exhibitions about art, science, and history.
In 2002 SITES celebrated 50 years of connecting
Americans to their shared cultural heritage.
Exhibition descriptions and tour schedules
are available at www.si.edu.sites.
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