Siavash "Siah" Armajani (Persian: سیاوش ارمجانی; 10 July 1939[1] – 27 August 2020)[2] was an Iranian-born American sculptor and architect known for his public art.

Siah Armajani
Born
Siavash Armajani

(1939-07-10)10 July 1939
Died27 August 2020(2020-08-27) (aged 81)
NationalityIranian American
AwardsKnight Fellow Award (US Artists), Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, McKnight Foundation

Family and education

edit

Siavash Armajani was born into a wealthy, educated family of textile merchants in 1939 in Tehran, Iran.[3] He attended a Presbyterian missionary school.[which?] He thought that his grandmother was the influence that started his political activism.[4] He began his art career making small collages in the late 1950s, visually mirroring Persian miniatures and political posters, to spread his vision of democracy and secularism and to publicize his party the National Front.[3]

After the monarch Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi came to power, in order to protect him, his family ordered him overseas in 1960. Armajani immigrated to the United States, where his uncle, Yahya Armajani, was chair of the history department at Macalester College.[5] There he studied art and philosophy, making Saint Paul, Minnesota, his permanent home.[3] He met his wife at Macalester and he and Barbara Bauer married in 1966.[6][2] He became an American citizen in 1967.[4]

Early career

edit

The Walker Art Center was the first to acquire Armajani's work, after he entered two works into their biennial in 1962. They purchased Prayer, an intricately lettered 70-inch (180 cm) canvas covered in Farsi poetry.[6]

Always interested in computing and engineering, during the late 1960s he took classes at Control Data Institute in Minneapolis, where he learned Fortran.[7] Armajani taught at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design from 1968 until 1979, where he met Barry Le Va, who introduced him to Conceptual art then practiced in New York City.[7] He participated in Art by Telephone at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago in 1969.[2] In 1970, Armajani contributed two works to the Museum of Modern Art exhibition Information: first, A Number Between Zero and One, a 9-foot (2.7 m) high column filled with computer printouts of individual decimal numbers; and second, North Dakota Tower, a proposed spire 18 miles (29 km) high and 2 miles (3.2 km) wide calculated to cast a narrow shadow over the entire length of North Dakota from east to west.[7][6]

Bridges

edit
 
Irene Hixon Whitney Bridge in Minneapolis (1988). Armajani felt this was his finest work of public art.[8]

In 1968, he built First Bridge in White Bear Lake, Minnesota as 10 feet (3.0 m) narrowing to 4 feet (1.2 m), illustrating our perspective vision.[2] He built Fibonacci Discovery Bridge (1968–1988) to follow the mathematical Fibonacci sequence and, for the Walker's outdoor show 9 Artists/9 Spaces, he built Bridge Over Tree (1970), a 91-foot (28 m) long walkway with stairs that rise and fall over an evergreen tree.[2]

In 1974–75, he built more than 1,000 cardboard and balsa wood models of components of American vernacular architecture titled Dictionary for Building.[7]

In 1988, he designed the Irene Hixon Whitney Bridge in Minneapolis, uniting two neighborhoods previously separated by 16 lanes of streets and highway.[9] Armajani expresses three basic types of bridge construction: beam (the walkway), arch (eastern side), and suspension (western side). He commissioned a poem by John Ashbery that is stamped into the bridge's upper beams.[8] And in 1993, he built on one side in Loring Park, the pavilion Gazebo for Four Anarchists: Mary Nardini, Irma Sanchini, William James Sidis, Carlo Valdinoci.[7]

 
The 1996 Olympic cauldron in Atlanta, which Armajani later disowned[6]
 
Siah Armajani, Bridge/Ramp, 1994, Stuttgart-Mitte, Innenhof der LBBW, beim Hauptbahnhof, Stuttgart

Siah Armajani designed the Olympic Torch presiding over the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia, United States, but later disowned the project[6] because the Olympic Committee failed to uphold their contract.[10] This was the first time the Olympic Torch was created by an artist; all previous designs had been created by engineers or architects. [11]

He worked on other projects such as the Round Gazebo in Nice, France,[12] the Sacco and Vanzetti Reading Room at the Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt, and projects in Münster, Germany; Battery Park City, New York; at Storm King Art Center in Mountainville, New York;[2] and at the North Shore Esplanade at the St. George's Staten Island Ferry Terminal in Staten Island, New York.[13]

Later career

edit

In his later years, Armajani returned to his politically active roots.[2] His 2005 work, Fallujah,[14] is a modern take on Picasso's Guernica but was censored in the U.S. due to its critical view of the war in Iraq.[15] It was recently on view at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Seven Rooms of Hospitality is based on a conversation between Jacques Derrida and Anne Dufourmantelle.[2] Room for Deportees (2017) speaks out to the hard line, anti-immigrant policies that took over in the US and Europe.[2]

An exhibition at Muelensteen Gallery in 2011 presented a dozen of Armajani's early pieces made between 1957 and 1962, created in the years leading up to his arrival in America. Many employ ink or watercolor on cloth or paper, and incorporate text. In his Shirt (1958), Armajani uses pencil and ink to completely cover his father's shirt in Persian script.[16]

The Minneapolis Institute of Art holds several works: Skyway No.2 (1980), a 5-foot (1.5 m) mahogany and brass portal; Mississippi Delta (2005-2006), a colored pencil on Mylar triptych picturing the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina; and An Exile Dreaming of Saint Adorno (2009), a cage-like inhabited tiny house or stage named for Theodor W. Adorno.[17][18][19]

Armajani was the subject of more than 50 solo exhibitions,[7] and his works featured in dozens of major exhibitions in the US and Europe.[20] Siah Armajani: Follow This Line, the first comprehensive US retrospective dedicated to the artist, was on view at the Walker Art Center September 9 through December 30, 2018,[21] and at the Met Breuer February 20 through June 2, 2019.[22]

Death

edit

Armajani died of heart failure in Minneapolis on August 27, 2020, at age 81.[2]

Awards and honors

edit

In 2010, he won a Knight Fellow award granted by United States Artists.[23] In 2011, he was awarded Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government and received a distinguished artist award from the McKnight Foundation.[3]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Fox, Howard N. (Aug 27, 1982). "Metaphor, New Projects by Contemporary Sculptors, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden". Smithsonian Institution Press. Retrieved Aug 27, 2020 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sung, Victoria (August 29, 2020). "A Builder in Search of Home: Remembering Siah Armajani (1939–2020)". Walker Art Center. Retrieved September 1, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d "Siah Armajani, Collections". Walker Art Center. Retrieved 2016-05-17.
  4. ^ a b Cotter, Holland (March 21, 2019). "Fraught and Fabulous: Art That Shows a Passion for Democracy". The New York Times. Retrieved September 2, 2020.
  5. ^ Kerr, Euan (September 7, 2018). "The complex connections of Siah Armajani". MPR News (Minnesota Public Radio). Retrieved September 2, 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d e Cascone, Sarah (August 28, 2020). "Iranian-American Artist Siah Armajani, Who Reimagined Public Spaces in Cities Around the World, Has Died at 81". ARTnet. Retrieved September 1, 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e f "Siah Armajani (1939–2020)". Artforum. August 28, 2020. Retrieved September 1, 2020.
  8. ^ a b "Siah Armajani: Irene Hixon Whitney Bridge, 1988". Walker Art Center. 2005. Retrieved September 3, 2020. and Peiken, Matt (April 8, 2018). "20th anniversary celebrations bridge present to the past". Walker Reader. Walker Art Center. Retrieved September 3, 2020.
  9. ^ Greenberger, Alex (August 28, 2020). "Siah Armajani, Ceaselessly Imaginative Artist with a Belief in the Power of Public Art, Is Dead at 81". ArtNews (Penske Business Media). Retrieved September 1, 2020.
  10. ^ Palmer, Hannah. "13 Ways of Looking at an Olympic Cauldron". Art Papers. Retrieved September 1, 2020.
  11. ^ Dylla, Sarah (September 23, 2020). "Not Just Sports: Arts and Culture of the '96 Games". Atlanta History Center.
  12. ^ "Siah Armajani's 'Bridge Over Tree' opens in Brooklyn Bridge Park". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 2019-02-19. Retrieved 2019-02-20.
  13. ^ "Siah Armajani". NYC Department of Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2016-05-17.
  14. ^ Siah Armajani (2004–2005). "Fallujah". Walker Art Center.
  15. ^ "El Pais". Retrieved 2006-10-05.
  16. ^ Schultz, Charles (October 2011). "Ann Pibal & Siah Armajani". The Brooklyn Rail.
  17. ^ "Mississippi Delta, Siah Armajani ^ Minneapolis Institute of Art". collections.artsmia.org. Retrieved 2018-02-17.
  18. ^ "An Exile Dreaming of Saint Adorno, Siah Armajani ^ Minneapolis Institute of Art". collections.artsmia.org. Retrieved 2018-02-17.
  19. ^ "Skyway No.2, Siah Armajani ^ Minneapolis Institute of Art". collections.artsmia.org. Retrieved 2018-02-17.
  20. ^ Masters, HG (August 28, 2020). "Obituary: Siah Armajani (1939–2020)". Art Asia Pacific. Retrieved September 2, 2020.
  21. ^ "Siah Armajani: Follow This Line". walkerart.org. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  22. ^ "Siah Armajani: Follow This Line". www.metmuseum.org. Retrieved 2019-04-24.
  23. ^ "Siah Armajani". United States Artists. Archived from the original on 2016-06-11. Retrieved 2016-05-17.

Further reading

edit
edit