Davood Koochaki — Un conte persan
Exhibition
Davood Koochaki
Un conte persan
Past: March 16 → April 20, 2013
Davood Koochaki was born in 1939 in Rasht, north-western Iran, not far from the Caspian Sea, claimed in legends of yore as the home of mysterious hybrid beings. Davood was taken out of school to help with the rice harvest at the age of seven. As a teenager, he left home to try his luck in Tehran, where he led something of a double life. He worked as a car mechanic by day, eventually opening his own garage, but by night he led a dissolute life, drinking heavily, making friends with Iranian intellectuals — despite being illiterate himself — and openly flaunting his left-wing views, both before and after the Islamic Revolution. Davood eventually married and fathered four children. Those close to him describe him as a complex personality, disarmingly frank and stubborn.
Only when he turned forty did he suddenly start drawing his enigmatic characters, gradually refining a technique that is close to cross-hatching, and increasing the size of his works. It was as if he were suddenly freeing himself of the ghosts of his past. His devilish, deformed chimeras appeared as if hidden by a veil, with just their gazes, rictus smiles, and, in many cases, genitals giving them the appearance of tangible, embodied, unveiled beings.
“I do try to draw perfectly, but this is what comes out.”
Davood Koochaki
His works, which until recently were met only with scorn, resonate with the “flowerings of high fever, utterly and intensely lived by their authors”, as Dubuffet might well have described them. To the point where their meaning must remain somewhat veiled, like a Persian tale, so as not to lay the artist’s soul too bare.
Opening hours
Wednesday – Saturday, 2 PM – 7 PM
Other times by appointment
The artist
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Davood Koochaki