Nature Has No Culture: The Photographs of Abbas Kiarostami

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Nature Has No Culture: The Photographs of Abbas Kiarostami Author(s): Shiva Balaghi and Anthony Shadid Source: Middle East Report, No. 219 (Summer, 2001), pp. 30-33 Published by: Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP) Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1559253 . Accessed: 27/06/2013 07:35 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP) is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Middle East Report. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 210.212.15.74 on Thu, 27 Jun 2013 07:35:17 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

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Transcript of Nature Has No Culture: The Photographs of Abbas Kiarostami

Page 1: Nature Has No Culture: The Photographs of Abbas Kiarostami

Nature Has No Culture: The Photographs of Abbas KiarostamiAuthor(s): Shiva Balaghi and Anthony ShadidSource: Middle East Report, No. 219 (Summer, 2001), pp. 30-33Published by: Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP)Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1559253 .

Accessed: 27/06/2013 07:35

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

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Page 2: Nature Has No Culture: The Photographs of Abbas Kiarostami

Nature Has No Culture

The Photographs of Abbas Hiarostami

Shiva Balaghi and Anthony Shadid

In April 2000, Abbas Kiarostami received the Akira Kurosawa Lifetime Achievement Award at the San Francisco

Film Festival. While in the United States, Kiarostami visited New York City, where the Andrea Rosen Gallery

mounted the first US exhibition of Kiarostami's photographs. The photographs, which were shown in a stark

white loft space, appeared without titles, dates or labels. Anthony Shadid and Shiva Balaghi spoke with Kiarostami

about his art photography.

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Page 3: Nature Has No Culture: The Photographs of Abbas Kiarostami

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Abattered SUV rumbles across a country road, winding through wheat fields. We hear a conversa-

tion between the passengers, who are trying to decipher the vague driving di- rections they've been given for finding a small village tucked in the hillside. They are to take a turn just beyond the solitary tree. As they drive along, they pass a majestic free-standing tree, its branches sprawled against a crisp cloud- less sky. Moments later, they pass an- other solitary tree-and then another and another. Which of these trees marks the spot, they wonder? So begins Abbas Kiarostami's latest film, The Wind Will Carry Us (1999). Perhaps more than any other, this Kiarostami film treats the Iranian countryside as a character and not a placid backdrop. The land- scapes-the contrasting colors of earth and sky, the stalks of wheat delicately

Shiva Balaghi is associatedirector ofthe Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies at New York University. Anthony Shadid writes for the Boston Globe.

moving to the breeze, the trees dotting the hillside-appear in characteristi- cally long, uncut wide shots.

The title of the film is taken from the poetry of Forugh Farrokhzad and in a pivotal scene of the film, Forugh's poem is recited. A leading feminist poet who rose to prominence in the 1960s, Forugh drew on nature to construct strikingly visual metaphors describing the complexities of her quest for inde- pendence as a woman writer in Iran. At times, she depicted herself in her poetry as enclosed and detached, watch- ing the world through the frame of a window. Yet Forugh's most evocative statement of intellectual and personal growth came in a verse where she ex- claimed that she would plant her hands in the garden and grow. In Forugh's writings, nature and the garden, com- mon tropes in classical Persian poetry, came to represent the elemental qual- ity of gender politics, the unnaturalness of restrictions on women's lives.

Kiarostami draws on and extends Forugh's interpretation of nature in both his film and photographs.

The photographs exhibited in Man- hattan in spring 2000 echo scenes from The Wind Will Carry Us. Though they are not film stills or location shots, Kiarostami said there is little difference between his filmmaking and photog- raphy. In the end, he sees their quali- ties merging.

"The nature that is in the location of my films can be seen in my photog- raphy, and I want my films to become closer to my photography and more distant from storytelling," he said. "It is true that these are completely sepa- rate milieus, but in my opinion, the ideal situation for me is for these two areas- photography and cinema-to become closer to one another."

Long before he began his career as a filmmaker, Kiarostami trained as a painter at the School of Fine Arts at Tehran University. He went on to work

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as a graphic artist and as a commercial director. In 1969, one of his commer- cials caught the eye of Firuz Shirvanlu, the director of the Center for the Intel- lectual Development of Children and Young Adults. Kiarostami was asked to establish a film division at the center. In 1970, he produced his first film, a short entitled Bread and Alley.l Since then, Kiarostami has directed nearly 30 films and has come to the attention of some ofthe leading figures of world cinema.2 Akira Kurosawa has said, "When Satyajit Ray passed on, I was very depressed. But after seeing Kiarostami's films, I thanked God for giving us just the right person to take his place."3

In his films, Kiarostami has explored the relationship between fiction and reality, the subjectivity of truth as framed by the camera's lens. Resisting a comfortable narrative, Kiarostami challenges the viewer to engage with his films, rather than to view them pas-

sively. Photography, which he took up during the revolution at a time that he doubted his future as a filmmaker, of- fers him another way to interact with his audiencei they are called on to ac- tively participate in the generation of meaning in Kiarostami's art.4

"I prefer the gaze of a viewer in front of a photograph to the kind of gaze that an audience of my films has in a the- ater," Kiarostami said. "The expectation of a viewer in the theater is to look for the continuities and changes in a story. He has grown accustomed to sitting in a theater and listening to a story. But in a gallery, I have seen that the viewers look at each single photograph, their gaze is more focused on the photograph, be- cause they do not expect to hear a story."

Like his films, his photographs are presented without expected guideposts that explain their significance. There are no labels, no titles, no dates. It is left to the viewer to lend them a par-

ticular meaning. Though it may ap- pear that his lens reveals an unchang- ing and placid nature, Kiarostami's photographs, in fact, seem to reveal a deeply political use of the landscape. "Photographs of nature are universal," he said. "A tree has no ethnicity, no birth certificate, no passport, no na- tionality, therefore what difference does it make where in the world this tree is What is important is the simi- larity between all trees, the similarity between all skies, the similarity be- tween all landscapes. Nature has no specific culture. I am emphasizing this lack of ethnicity of nature. Therefore I do not want to mark the specific time and place of my photographs."

Some themes emerge in his photo- graphs the solitary tree, for instance. Kiarostami acknowledges the pattern, but assigns a random, incidental quality to it. "I did not know that there would be a theme found in my photographs at

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a later stage," he said. "I know that each solitary tree, if it had a particular purity, invited me to stop and take its photo- graph. I did not plan to have so many solitary trees in my photographs over the years. But each of these trees has its own purity, its own individuality. I may have passed by a tree time and again over the years and never photographed it; one day it may invite me to stop and take its pic- ture. If there is a theme, it has developed over the years."

By chronicling what he sees, Kiarostami said he views himself as a journalist, in a sense. His intervention, he said, is crucial to capture a moment in time. "A photojournalist covers the news from the scene of war, and I, with nature, cover the news of the scene of peace. I don't think there is a funda- mental difference; it is a difference in the selection of a subject. For a photo- journalist, a moment is important-the moment for taking a photograph. For a photographer of nature, this particu- lar moment is also important. Without those moments, no image is worth re-

cording. There is only one moment in which a photograph can be taken."

Since the 1980s, when his films were first shown outside of Iran, Kiarostami has achieved a growing reputation as a filmmaker in the West. When asked if he sees a difference in his role as an art- ist within Iran as opposed to an artist producing for a Western audience, Kiarostami offers an emphatic response that signals the clearly political quality of the universality in his nature photo- graphs. "No, in a sense, this is a ques- tion that has its answer in it. You ask me this question but know my answer. In my mind a human being has a universal quality. If there has been a division of humanity into smaller groups, it is be- cause of economic and political condi- tions. And the framework of cultural conditions that exist are influenced by economics and politics. But mankind must be a universal being. It is my am- bition that each person see themselves as a human being first and not as an ethnicity. These classifications occurred later, in my opinion. A person is not born

with a birth certificate, with a passport. When you speak about a human being, and not about his culture or his nation- ality or his politics, naturally, you can communicate with all of the people of the world. And for this reason, each per- son who speaks at a profound level of humanity can be understood by anyone. Without nationality, language, tribalism and culture, all people are the same." v

Authors' Note: The authors would like to thank Abbas Kiarostami, JamsheedAkrami and Andrea Rosen.

Endnotes

1 For more on the history of the Center's activities, see Saeed Sharifi, "The Center for Intellectual Development of Children and Young Adults, 1965-1996," Goftego (Spring 1998). Translated into English at www.netiran.com.

2 For a complete filmography, consult www.imdb.com.

3 From the official website for the film Taste of Cherry, www.zeitgeistfilm.com/current/tasteofcherry/ kiarostami.html. Kiarostami won numerous prestigious awards, including the Palme D'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1997 for Taste of Cherry. The same year, he received the UNESCO Fellini Medal in Gold for his achievements in film, freedom, peace and tolerance.

4 Casey Williamson, "Art Matters: The Films of Abbas Kiarostami," in Rose Issa and Sheila Whitaker, eds., Life and Art: The New Iranian Cinema (London: Visiting Arts, 1999).

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