Vulnerable Men
by Tala Madani
19-Sep-2011
Wikipedia: Tala Madani (born 1981 in Tehran) is an artist based in New Haven, Connecticut, USA. She is a painter whose recurrent motifs include men, often made vulnerable, which gives the effect of reversing the conventionally objectified female body in painting. Her painting style is loose, incorporating gestural brushstrokes into figurative narrative scenes that often have a bizarre, fetishistic quality to them. The men in her paintings often appear to be ridiculed, and clownish, and the loose brushstrokes and flat pictorial space give an almost cartoon quality to her paintings
>>>
Does anyone remeber Ashur Banipal?
by Mash Ghasem on Fri Sep 23, 2011 12:05 AM PDTOr is this "double ID" the only one.
I'm refering to the Iranian-Assurian artist. not the myth!
Did a google search, it's was hopeless. As if he never existed.
Here are some explanation from Saatchi Gallery
by Omid Hast on Thu Sep 22, 2011 07:40 PM PDTPainting #7, Two Pillows and a Bolster devises a ‘slap-and-tickle’ approach to formal painting. Picturing a man lying across a bed with his unwound turban suggesting the final stages of seduction, the visual clues to his wantonness lie in the painting’s composition rather than its image: the mattress and pillows form a female torso, the man’s body creates an immodest shape and angle. Rendered in the muted tones of soft-porn, Madani’s muse resolves as a lusty wannabe centrefold, or more comically, a frustrated and repressed depiction of a quiet night in for one.
Here is the link for more explanations from Saatchi Gallery,
//www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/artists/tala_mada...
Why these paintings remind of Ashur Banipal?
by Hooshang Tarreh-Gol on Wed Sep 21, 2011 05:56 AM PDTJust because!
Iranian Man!
by angali on Tue Sep 20, 2011 12:40 AM PDTIf anything, Ms. Madani's work shows the Iranian man in his purest (and maybe most honest) form: The man-child-bully! The irony is even the men who are not bald and have no mustache, men who might even resent this man, identify with the man in these drawings. What is interesting is the additional (at first, undetectable) layer; that is, that fact that here it is not the "man" who is honestly exposing himself, his true nature, but it is a critique—a woman—who is analyzing this man, humorously, as well as angrily (maybe, if not most probably!). In addition to exposing the absurd and ridiculous nature of man, the artist also exposes her own self: her own frustration and anger as a woman; and she uses her anger in the form of an undetectable fist, with which she hits the spectator right on the nose. I was hit on the nise and yet I really enjoyed every piece of work—the wit, the humor, the sarcasm, the analysis (particularly). Now I can hardly wait to see Ms. Madani draw an honest set with the Iranian woman as the subject!
...
by Truthseeker9 on Mon Sep 19, 2011 12:16 PM PDTThe only message I did get was the flies using the bald head as a landing strip, perhaps a caption underneath each picture would help. Though I would be too scared to ask about 23
and 24.
Revolutionary work.
by vildemose on Mon Sep 19, 2011 10:18 AM PDTRevolutionary work. Though I don't get all the multi layered hidden messages but the entire collection is acerbic and moving on so many levels; brutally exposing the monumental insecurities of men...well done.
Reform requires the consent of the corrupt
I like your style
by Anahid Hojjati on Mon Sep 19, 2011 10:12 AM PDTBut I have to be honest and say that I don't get the messages. Your style is very fun though and I love it. I wish I could understand your messages better.
Bald and Hairy Men!
by Faramarz on Mon Sep 19, 2011 09:50 AM PDTIn all kinds of compromising situations!
There is humor in these drawings, somewhere.
genius & gender
by Jahanshah Javid on Mon Sep 19, 2011 09:45 AM PDTI was asked by an artist yesterday if I was familiar with Tala Madani's work. The name rang bell. I checked and she was featured as Iranian of the day many years ago but I had not seen her recent work. I was fascinated by the absence of women and the objectification of men instead -- a sort of role reversal in the world of art where so often it's about women, their beautiful form and vulnerabilities.
brilliant, brilliant work.