The Mystical Creatures of Eden (Hippo)
solvent transfer on paper
2021-
About the work
- Location
-
Country: Holy See
City: Vatican City
Place: British Embassy
This work is part of the series 'The Mystical Creatures of Eden', and combines Persian calligraphy and motifs with scenes of nature from Mohammad Barrangi’s birthplace, Iran. Significant female figures from his life and animals are reimagined for the other-worldly landscapes he creates. Barrangi’s visual language moves across time and place and is a direct response to his experience of the world. He has developed a particular form of printmaking in a two-stage process that involves drawing and printing onto handmade paper. The first stage is using an Iranian calligraphy method to make the initial drawing. He then scans, collages, and prints the drawings. They are then transferred using cellulose thinners onto a new sheet of paper, which has been prepared with Iranian wood stain.
-
About the artist
Mohammad Barrangi was born in Iran. He majored in graphic design at the Islamic Azad University of Tonekabon, after which he moved into book illustration and printmaking. Barrangi moved to the UK and undertook a MA at the Royal Drawing School in 2019. His work combines elements of calligraphy, storytelling, text and touches of humour. Born without the use of his left arm, Barrangi has developed a unique process of making large murals, as well as smaller works on paper, that feature layered cultural references and personal imagery. Barrangi has works in the collections of the British Museum and the San Diego Museum of Art. Recent exhibitions include: 'Anything Is Possible: Mohammad Barrangi', Edinburgh Printmakers, Edinburgh (2022) and 'The Conference of the Birds', Advocartsy, Los Angeles (2020-1).
-
Explore
- Places
- Subjects
- Materials & Techniques
- paper (as artists material), print (as object name)
-
Details
- Artist
-
Mohammad Barrangi (1988 - )
- Title
- The Mystical Creatures of Eden (Hippo)
- Date
- 2021
- Medium
- solvent transfer on paper
- Dimensions
- height: 36.0 cm; width: 48.0 cm
- Acquisition
- Purchased from International Curator's Forum (ICE), March 2022
- Provenance
- The artist, via International Curators Forum (ICE); from whom purchased by UK Government Art Collection, 31 March 2022
- GAC number
- 19076