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PEJMAN EBADI
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Pejman Ebadi was born in Tehran, Iran, on March 24, 1982, at the height of the Iran-Iraq war. He is aged two when the family leaves the war stricken homeland to find refuge in France. He is four years old when his father, a poet and amateur painter, discovers his precocious gift for painting and drawing. He is encouraged to express himself freely without any particular guidance. He is not tutored and never receives a formal art education. His father takes him to major art exhibitions in Paris and provides him with books of painting of major artists of the 20th century.  From the age of four until today Pejman has never ceased to paint, creating a rich, diverse and intense body of work spanning over two decades and covering different styles and periods.

Pejman participates for the first time in a collective exhibition in Paris in 1988 and holds his first solo show in Les Lilas, outside Paris, three years later in 1991. The next year he holds solo shows in Metz, Berlin and Solothurn. Pejman has realised over fifty solo and over twenty group shows so far. Three monographs retrace his entire production until 2007. Pejman has held important venues in Paris, Berlin, Hamburg, Metz, Lyon, Montreal, Toronto, Bern, Zurich and Copenhagen. In the year 2000, Metz's Arsenal offers him his first retrospective where 150 works covering fifteen years of work are shown in a public institution.

From a very early age Pejman travels extensively around the world. In particular two trips to  the Amazone region in 1991 and the following year, leave strong and lasting impressions on him. In the past six years he has been spending half the year in Brazil, Thailand and India and the other half in Nice, the French Riviera, where he has a studio.

Artist Statement

Before anything else painting is a life long passion for me. I had a painting brush in my hand before I could even read or write. Painting is the most natural way for me to express myself; it is something very much innate in me. I don’t need to be in a special mood or state of mind to be inspired, in order to create. I have lacked a lot of things but have never had to look for inspiration. I don’t even know really what it means to be inspired; whenever I feel like it, and that is quite often, I just get up and got to the studio to work. The feeling of sterility is something unknown to me. Creating art works is the closest thing I have to be in my natural state. Painting transposes me immediately to a world of great intimacy, familiarity; it is like returning to my natural state, kind of returning home.

My paintings are an incessant exploration of my subconscious and all things mysterious and unknown to me within and without. Painting allows me to fathom the depths of my psyche, it is also a place of healing for me, but it is also here that I come close to a meditative state; by this I mean a state of total absorption, where I am totally integrated with the process that is unfolding in front of me. Creating in this sense means revealing and encountering the essence of my own being, my being and in a larger sense, all beings.

I never know beforehand what I am going to paint. It’s in a spontaneous movement that I project myself on the canvas without any prior visualization. It’s the force of the blank surface that captivates and draws me. As the work progresses forms and colors begin to take shape as if slowly emerging from a primordial chaos. Slowly compositions and forms begin to unfold; it’s the force of the unknown, the energy flow of the subconscious that manifesting itself through the creative act guides me through the work. It’s as if, mesmerized by the invisible, its echoes guide my steps. Here we are talking of something very different to an installation; it’s rather a un-installation. I don’t oppose the visceral element to the cerebral one, it’s just that in my work it’s the irruption of the former that gives the impetus to the elaboration of the later; there is sure a thinking process involved in the act of creating but it not one born out of conceptual reasoning and ideations.

It’s always difficult for me to express my paintings through words; for me creating comes closer to something that I would describe as a shamanistic voyage. Words fail to capture the essence of the world of spirits. The same as with my painting; its language belongs to another world, rather, to the other world; the world of the unknown and the unseen.

In a deeper sense, I paint to allow my soul to liberate itself.

Pejman or the groaning ruins

“ How are you to know the tiger’s cubs if you don’t enter its lair?”
A Chinese proverb

I

One word comes to mind when I look at Pejman’s paintings: mythologies. When I look at them, I feel overwhelmed by stories of godheads and goddesses, of ferocious combats, conquests, and the surging of emotions linked to this glance leaves one dumbfounded like what follows a cavernous trip to the realms of a Primordial Subconscious. These are buried totems that remerge to howl their power to the world. They are filled with love and tumult. They are embedded in cries that remain hushed and in words that doubt. These mythologies remain secret. They participate in a vaster scheme than that of the painter himself: one of going “there” and retrieving signs and signals. When the young Arthur Rimbaud writes in his “ Letter to the seer”: “He reaches the unknown and when, terrified, he ends up by losing the meaning of his visions, at last he has seen them! Let him die of his bound through things unheard of and unnameable: other horrible labourers will emerge; they will begin from those horizons where the other had succumbed!” it is of this he is speaking: of this journey to the core of oneself, of this dive inside a perpetually renewed sea wherein one has to lose oneself in order to discover nuggets of fire and colour. Pejman is akin to Rimbaud’s desire and is directly in his lineage; he collects the emotions of an ageless age and speaks of a man who has shun his lids.

II

Neither a quest nor a philosophy, this wayfaring is the desiring of a shaman. Like him Pejman is a visitor of worlds. Like him Pejman is a disciple of the in-between. Like him Pejman is mindful of the unspeakable. Like him Pejman helps us to heal through his sacrifice and glory. Pejman’s vision of worlds creates a catharsis of the view that comes questioning us closest to our obscurities, those places where we do not always wish to go. We have no words to describe these lands. In such parts of Being, opposing and painful forces wage a battle of flames and tears. Here, Pejman is guardian to a Subconscious whose gates he opens with dread and jubilation. We are in want of words to design such lands. Pejman has his strewn images and sometimes phrases resembling claw marks through which he attempts to convey the untranslatable, the unnameable. He is tuned in to an invisible which discloses parts of its body through the veil of dreams, associations, colours and forms. For there is no evidence in Pejman’s paintings. It’s a work that surpasses language in order to restore the at once complementary and warlike relationship between light and obscurity. Its here, in a particular state of trance that we find shamanism at work in Pejman’s paintings. It is this trance that confers a telluric energy to his canvases and initiates movements of Being at the extremity of what is speakable. It is like a shadow’s mouth intending to speak yet, not uttering a word, spews out instead its stars in a violent jolt. Pejman’s trance is his mission. It’s a trance-mission.

III

Datura ( poem )

The miracle is in the dark
Nowhere a door to knock at
Only the sky
Drawn down
Stubborn shadow mocking the mouth
Joy should be menaced
Comfort pushed aside
Evidence distraught
The world’s edge held on the palm of a hand extended towards the inner necessary catastrophe
Breaking the dyke
Welcoming the tides
Profusely translating the austere
Life’s meaning drunk from the blade
From the arrow
From the rupture
From the crack
From the untiring knife

IV

Like an archaeologist, Pejman haunts, discovers and polishes with his brush the rough bare bones, the broken amphora, the wounded wall. The ruins disclose their learned organisation. He writes “I paint to survive” on one of his paintings. Yes, that is it! Surviving disarticulation! But to do so it is necessary beforehand to reorganize the chaos, to give it meaning, a sense of direction and only then to take the winding path that leads to the contemplation of nothingness. Music aliments the sound of the brush on the canvas. It’s a beating heart that is of help in the run of one’s life. Pejman is respiring now. His latest works point to a significant advance in the mastering of composition. A refinement is confirming itself. Lets not naïvely believe (that would reassure us!) that he has quietened down or the fight with adverse forces is behind him. Pejman reflects and reveals the void. With each new painting he undertakes considerable risks. Each time he recommences the world and recommences himself. He is born to himself and born to the Other. Through prolonged acquaintance with depths he has acquired a profound breath that allows him longer dives. That’s what it is: a greater capacity to looking the Dark in the face! He has come to know the Monster and shows it now to us without fear or reckoning. And in this movement, that goes from 2001 to 2006, he leaves aside the fear of being and composes a tribute to life, highly symbolic, terribly beautiful.

V

We are enriched with what dispossess us the most.

Alain Héril  2006

Pejman Ebadi’s paintings strike us at once by their differences (and their resemblances), their heterogeneity and their perfect maturity. Not a colour, not a shape, not a technique, not a material, and we assume, not even a way of painting, is recurrent. Thus, we walk like passers-by from fine intertwined black lines to bursts of coloured drops, from the crossing of multicoloured lines to monochrome surfaces.

The rhythm of space captured in thick strokes, or circumscribed by sinuous curves, plain background or explosion of colours: an incipient encyclopaedia of colours and shapes. We could play the game of guessing references of each painting. All the experiences patiently acquired by the masters of modern art seem to have been summoned here, as if languages of abstraction were in a pictorial Babel. But this detective work could trap us, in vain, in the uncertain labyrinth of genealogical investigations. The references are too numerous and contradictory to be plainly identified. Paradoxically, this very structured, very erudite artwork imperatively requires a virgin, innocent, naïve eye. Furthermore, it requires an immersion, a freefall into this smooth, transparent, sprightly world: world of ease and pleasures, a world without violence, joy without suffering.

Pejman makes us dream of a nomadic, eccentric painting that lies in the quickness of gesture and in the lightness of a gentle line, not pompous, free of guilt. He invents art (that will not melt, that will not limit a land, a country, a territory: an interiorization, a non-ritual, non exclusive, non sacrificial painting), an imaginative art freed from the imprisoning weight of imagery. Thus, we leave surreptitiously the painter’s ego, we finally escape from the artist’s inner world, with all the mummified sensations, sclerosed impressions, pious nostalgia, passionate complacency, rancid emotions, callused images and resentment it implies. All this supposes a painful and haughty perception of the world is dismissed, eradicated by an a-subjective approach that only focuses on the relations of colours and shapes, and substitutes the aleatory of centrifugal games to the centripetal “I”.

Artwork perpetually raving and fantasizing its (absence of) origin, reducing to agony the homages to the founding heroes: from Kandinsky to Pollock, from Klee to Bram van Velde … inventing itself fathers to the exhaustion of fatherhood itself. This artwork whirls us into a spiral journey like in an accelerated replay of contemporary art history, where all the quotations placed alongside cancel each other out: this review turning out to be a worry-free game of hopscotch where, in each square, a spiritual father would be assassinated.

All these great oedipal speakers, with eyes turn out, who desperately write in their compulsive gestures the weight of what is licitly visible, are killed, one at a time, by a gracious and virtuous Hermes. Their world of chained images are dilapidated by this child prodigy that owns the keys to all their pantheons and who enters shamelessly into them to set free to the wind what can be found in their small hidden cabinets, and to walk happily in all their secret gardens.

All that was closed is opened, all excess is lightened. What remains unaltered, beyond the lines, is the barely formalized gesture, a gesture of talent, of loss, of dance: a joyous knowledge (which always violates and kills the real knowledge), gesture that unarms and opposes the tragic, sacrificial, exclusive gesture that freezes and seals: virtuous gesture that opens the dimension of the virtual.

This un-obsessed, non destructive artwork, escapes the eternal repetition of forms, the eternal return of the same, going off into an uncertain elsewhere, where, for some time, the immemorial antagonism of pigment and surface, of line and stroke, of angle and curve, stays suspended, deferring the final St. Bartholomew of colours.

Richard Scoffier  1991

https://www.saatchiart.com/pejman
1982, Tehran, Iran. Living in France since 1984. Currently residing in Nice, Riviera, where I have a studio. Spend half the year in the Far-East. Painting is a life long passion for me. I had a painting brush in my hand before I could read or write. Painting is the most natural way for me to express myself; it is something very much innate in me. I don’t need to be in a special mood or state of mind to be inspired, in order to create. I have lacked a lot of things but have never had to look for inspiration. I don’t even know really what it means to be inspired; whenever I feel like it, and that is quite often, I just get up and got to the studio to work. The feeling of sterility is something unknown to me. Creating art works is the closest thing I have to be in my natural state. Painting transposes me immediately to a world of great intimacy, familiarity; it is like returning to my element, a kind of returning home. My paintings are an incessant exploration of my subconscious and all things mysterious and unknown to me within and without. Painting allows me to fathom the depths of my psyche, it is also a place of healing for me, but it is also here that I come close to a meditative state; by this I mean a state of total absorption, where I am totally integrated with the process unfolding before me. Creating in this sense means revealing and encountering the essence of my own being, my being and in a larger sense, all beings. I never know beforehand what I am going to paint. There are no plans. It’s in a spontaneous movement that I project myself onto the canvas without prior visualization. It’s the sheer force of the blank surface that captivates and captures me. As the work progresses forms and colours begin to take shape as if slowly emerging from a primordial chaos. Slowly compositions and forms begin to unfold; it’s the force of the unknown, the energy flow of the subconscious that manifesting itself through the creative act guides me through the work. It’s as if, mesmerized by the invisible, its echoes guide my steps. Here we are talking of something very different to an installation; it’s rather an un-installation. I don’t oppose the visceral element to the cerebral one, its just that in my work it’s the irruption of the former that gives the impetus to the elaboration of the later; there is sure a thinking process involved in the act of creating but it not one born out of conceptual reasoning and ideations. It’s always difficult for me to express my paintings through words; for me creating comes closer to something that I would describe as a shamanistic voyage. Words fail to capture the essence of the world of spirits. The same as with my painting; its language belongs to another world, rather, to the other world; the world of the unknown and the unseen. In a deeper sense, I paint to liberate my soul.

https://pejmanebadi.wordpress.com/
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