Gohar Dashti Untitled, de la série | from the series Stateless, 2014–2015.
Photo : permission de l’artiste | courtesy of the artist

Deeply marked by the Iran-Iraq war (1980–88), the younger generation of Iranian photographers often returns to that reality, which has had a profound impact on Iranian society. Gohar Dashti tackles the subject explicitly in Today’s Life and War (2008). Yet her images go beyond references to a specific event, providing a clear illustration of the shift that occurs between the attempt to preserve day-to-day life in wartime and the “day-to-day becoming” of conflict. Her photographs revolve around the contrast between the staging of a young couple’s routine — meals, TV, newspapers — and a scenography of war made of armoured vehicles, soldiers, and sandbag shelters. The formal declensions of photography take the representation of war, conventionally associated with photojournalism, toward a more conceptual and symbolic dimension made of disjunctions and discrepancies between the subject and the setting.

You must have a valid Digital or Premium subscription to access this content.

Subscribe to Esse or log in now to read the full text!

Subscribe
Log in
This article also appears in the issue 96 - Conflict
Discover

Suggested Reading