User:Ghass Rouzkhosh

Paris-based Iranian painter Ghass Rouzkhosh addresses contemporary cultural and geopolitical issues through his work. In tackling complex questions, and referring to his personal experiences as a soldier during the devastating Iran-Iraq war, Ghass limits himself to three symbolic colours - red, black and white - and incorporates the picture frame into the painting.

Ghass's work is about more than method: he has a remarkable ability to take a pre-determined set of conditions, to extract the essence of colour and meaning, and to discard the rest. His powerful, sometimes three-dimensional paintings evoke both fascination and malaise.

Born in Iran in 1964, Ghass Rouzkhosh has been an artist for 26 years. He was a soldier for two years during the eight-year Iran-Iraq war, and his vision of society was transformed by the painful experience of conflict.

For the past 16 years, Rouzkhosh has been using only three colours: red, black and white, unadulterated. The colour the sky takes on after a shelling inspired his use of red, and the charred trees inspired the black.

When asked about his paintings, Ghass states, “I don’t do nice paintings. I want to give a voice to who cannot speak, because suffering belongs to all.” He explores the clash between culture, religion, economy and politics, using recognizable religious images or cultural iconography as his subjects. His paintings return to a forgotten debate within art theory and practice, that of how ethics relate to aesthetics.

Ghass works more than 20 hours per day, always renewing the limits of visual expression. He manages to convey the transition from war to art and the terrifying echoes of violence through a narrow field of expression.

Besides the pre-determined use of colour, the paintings present other common traits: a rejection of traditional standards of composition and design; and a simultaneously tense yet playful presentation of objects in a primitive manner, which communicate a sense of inner disturbance.

Ghass Rouzkhosh’s work has received international critical acclaim, the subject of reviews in numerous publications including Le Monde, and the magazine Point de Vue, and on television and radio network Voice of America. The artist currently lives and works in Paris. His works are held in prestigious private collections in Iran, France, Belgium, America, India, Great-Britain, Peru, Portugal, Switzerland, Sweden, Algeria, Tunisia, Italy and the UAE.

In May 2007, a book dedicated to Ghass’ oeuvre and life was launched with the foreword by Her Majesty the Empress Farah Pahlavi. wwww.ghass.fr