Collections
Islamic Art Now: Contemporary Art of the Middle East
In recent years, the parameters of Islamic art (particularly as defined by museums, commercial art galleries, and private collections) have expanded to include contemporary works by artists from or with roots in the Middle East. These artists draw inspiration from their own cultural traditions, using techniques and incorporating imagery and ideas from earlier periods. They are not so much reinventing Islamic art as they are repurposing it so that it becomes more clearly a vehicle for personal expression, freed from the constraints of patronage and functionality.
LACMA has only recently begun to acquire contemporary art of the Middle East within the context of our Islamic collection in the belief that the function, strength, and ultimate success and relevance of the collection should not be based solely on exploring this art as a means to better understand the past. The collection can also be seen as a way to build creative links between the past, the present, and the future.
Wafaa Bilal
Chair from the series Ashes, 2003-2013
Wafaa Bilal
Market, 2003-2013
Pouya Afshar
Rostam in Wonderland [Five (5) Episodes], 2012-2014
Fereydoun Ave
Rostam in the Dead of Winter, 2009
Farideh Lashai
Prelude to Rabbit in Wonderland (Video version), 2012
Farah Ossouli
Michelangelo, Ahmad and I, 2014
Burhan Cahit Doǧançay
Versace Man, 1989
Kaveh Golestan
Untitled, 1976
Kaveh Golestan
Untitled, 1976
Kaveh Golestan
Untitled, 1976
Kaveh Golestan
Untitled, 1976
Kaveh Golestan
Untitled, 1976
Amir Mousavi
Untitled, #8, from the series Lost in Wonderland I, 2011
Shoja Azari
Idyllic Life, 2012
Abbas Kowsari
Untitled, 2006
Abbas Kowsari
Untitled, 2006
Mohsen Zare
Untitled, 2014
Lulwah Al Homoud
Subhan Allah, 2014
Maïmouna Guerresi
White Carpet, 2006
Kamran Sharif
Untitled, 2015