Shirazeh Houshiary
*1955 | Iran
Shirazeh Houshiary moved to London in 1974 and joined the Chelsea School of Art. She then attended the Cardiff College of Art from 1979 to 1980 and found herself associated with Richard Deacon and Anish Kapoor’s group. While her art may be rather abstract and her interest in the spiritual palpable, she stands out through her use of specific sources of inspiration, such as Islamic art and architecture. Since the 1990s, her work has also shown the influence of the Sufi mystical doctrine. Houshiary defines art as a by-product of the soul’s journey. She started by modelling biomorphic sculptures, using materials such as clay or straw, then moved on to metals. Her work became physically simpler, her style more stripped-back, and her materials more delicate. Geometry began to play an increasingly important part: Bloom in 2005 (Midtown, Tokyo); Undoing the Knot in 2007 (Lisson Gallery, London); Loom in 2009 (Lisson Gallery, London), column-shaped pieces constructed as ascending spirals with small aluminium or steel bricks. One is reminded of Brancusi’s Endless Columns, but also and especially of minarets, particularly the minaret of the Samarra Mosque in Iraq, commonly called Al-Malwiyya (“the spiral”).