Nazgol Ansarinia, Private Waters, 2020
Resin, Composed of 52 pieces
Dimensions variable
Nazgol Ansarinia, Private Waters (detail), 2020
Nazgol Ansarinia, Private Waters (detail), 2020
Nazgol Ansarinia, Lakes drying tides rising, 2022
Plaster and pigment colour, 109 x 75 x 3 cm
Unique in a series of 2 + AP
Nazgol Ansarinia, Lakes drying tides rising (detail), 2022
Nazgol Ansarinia, Lakes drying tides rising, 2022
Plaster and pigment colour, 146 x 100 x 3 cm
Unique in a series of 2 + AP
Lakes Drying, Tides Rising, Nazgol Ansarinia
Installation view at Green Art Gallery, Dubai, 2022
Lakes Drying, Tides Rising, Nazgol Ansarinia
Installation view at Green Art Gallery, Dubai, 2022
Lakes Drying, Tides Rising, Nazgol Ansarinia
Installation view at Green Art Gallery, Dubai, 2022
Nazgol Ansarinia, Connected Pools, 2020
Blue plaster, 25.7 x 40 x 25 cm, Unique in a series of 2 + AP
Nazgol Ansarinia, Connected Pools, 2020
Blue plaster, 33.2 x 27.5 x 21.8 cm, Unique in a series of 2 + AP
Nazgol Ansarinia, Connected Pools, 2020
Blue plaster, 33.2 x 27.5 x 21.8 cm, Unique in a series of 2 + AP
Nazgol Ansarinia, Connected Pools, 2020
Blue plaster, 22 x 19.1 x 25 cm, Unique in a series of 2 + AP
Nazgol Ansarinia, Connected Pools, 2020
Blue plaster, 21.4 x 26.3 x 29 cm, Unique in a series of 2 + AP
Nazgol Ansarinia, The Inverted Pool, 2019
Concrete, metal, pigment and plaster
600 x 360 x 300 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, The Inverted Pool, 2019
Concrete, metal, pigment and plaster
600 x 360 x 300 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, The Inverted Pool (detail), 2019
Concrete, metal, pigment and plaster
600 x 360 x 300 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, The Mechanism of Growth, demolishing buildings, buying waste, 2017
Plaster, pigment and glue, Dimensions variable
Nazgol Ansarinia, The Mechanisms of Growth, Demolishing buildings, buying waste (detail)
2017, Plaster, pigment and glue, Dimensions variable
Nazgol Ansarinia, The Mechanisms of Growth, Demolishing buildings, buying waste (detail)
2017, Plaster, pigment and glue, Dimensions variable
Nazgol Ansarinia, Membrane, 2014
Paper, paste and glue, 550 x 500 cm
Installation view at Green Art Gallery, Dubai
Nazgol Ansarinia, Ceramic Brick, Demolishing buildings, buying waste, 2017
Poly-urethane and paint, 71 x 23.5 x 149 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, Article 43, Pillars, 2019
Paper paste and cardboard, 90 x 120 x 120 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, Article 47, Pillars, 2015
Paper paste and cardboard, 65 x 35 x 35 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, Article 47, Pillars (detail), 2015
Nazgol Ansarinia, Pillars, 2014
Installation view at FIAC, 2014
Nazgol Ansarinia, Article 49, Pillars, 2014
Cast resin and paint, 40 x 40 x 20 cm, Ed. of 3
Nazgol Ansarinia, Fragment 1, Demolishing buildings, buying waste, 2016
Video, Duration 6 mins 15 sec, Ed. of 5 + AP
Installation view at KIOSK, Belgium
Nazgol Ansarinia, Fragment 2, Demolishing buildings, buying waste (still), 2017
Video, Duration 6 mins 15 sec, Ed. of 5
Nazgol Ansarinia, Untitled, Demolishing buildings, buying waste, 2018
Ink and marker on paper, 35.5 x 28 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, Untitled, Demolishing buildings, buying waste, 2018
Ink and marker on paper, 35.5 x 28 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, Untitled, Demolishing buildings, buying waste, 2018
Ink and marker on paper, 35.5 x 28 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, Fabrications, 2013
Nazgol Ansarinia in collaboration with Roozbeh Elias-Azar
Fabrications, Residential apartments/ water reserve & wind towers on Sayad highway, 2013
Plaster, resin and paint, 18.5 x 18 x 11 cm, Ed. of 3 + AP
Nazgol Ansarinia in collaboration with Roozbeh Elias-Azar
Fabrications, Residential building/ belvedere & garden on Resalat highway, 2013
Plaster, resin and paint, 11 x 20 x 13 cm, Ed. of 3 + AP
Nazgol Ansarinia, Mendings (chair), 2012
Mixed media, 97.75 x 47 x 50.75 cm, Ed. of 2
Nazgol Ansarinia, Mendings (Tabriz Carpet), 2011
Cotton and wool, 380 x 163 cm
Installation view at Argo Factory, Tehran, Iran, 2020
Nazgol Ansarinia, Mendings (pink mattress), 2012
Mattress, see-through thread, 180 x 54 x 23 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, Mendings (plates), 2012
China plates, glue, Dimensions variable
Nazgol Ansarinia, Reflections/Refractions, Death to America shouted in 7 provinces in Yemen, Explosion in Yemens Anti American Protests, 2012
Newspaper collage, 40 x 60 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, Reflections/Refractions, Sepahan After Fixing a Position on Top. In Isteghlal’s absence Sepahan Fixes its Position on Top, 2012
Newspaper collage, 40 x 60 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, Reflections/Refractions, Minimum Social Security Pensions Will Rise to ٣٠٠ Dollars- Mortazavi / Minimum Pension 300 Dollars- Social Security, 2012
Newspaper collage, 30 x 40 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, Private Assortment Series 2011 - 2013, Metal Chair, 2013
Mixed media, 50 x 46 x 80 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, Private Assortment Series, 2011-2013, Metal Chair, 2013
Mixed media, 50 x 46 x 80 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia, NSS Book Series, 2008
Printed paper bound together in book format with a foil embossed cover
Composed of 4 books, Dimensions variable
Installation view at Queens Museum, NY, 2009
Nazgol Ansarinia, NSS Book Series (detail), 2008
Nazgol Ansarinia, NSS Book Series (detail), 2008
Nazgol Ansarinia, NSS Book Series (detail), 2008
Nazgol Ansarinia, Untitled III, Patterns, 2009
Ink drawing & digital print on tracing paper, 88 x 109 cm (each panel)
Nazgol Ansarinia, Untitled III, Patterns (detail), 2009
Nazgol Ansarinia, Untitled, Patterns, 2008
Ink drawing and digital print on paper, 43 x 32 cm
Nazgol Ansarinia’s work examines the systems and networks that underpin her daily life such as everyday objects, routines, events and experiences, and the relationship they form to a larger social context. Born and raised in Tehran, Ansarinia’s practice reflects upon tensions between private worlds and the wider socioeconomic realm, and how local iterations of a culture might act as a site for the hopes and fears of those living in a (faltering) globalised world.
Her recent projects, ranging across sculpture, installation, drawing, and video, represent ways of understanding the role of architecture in delineating interior and exterior spaces and private and public spheres.
Informed by her interdisciplinary background in art and design, projects range in approach and material to offer a perspective that considers the aesthetic and theoretical implications of vernacular architectural practices within the built environment. Ansarinia’s works are largely observational and technical in their scope, offering insight into the issues that are most pressing and urgent for today’s cities and the populations that inhabit them.
Born in 1979 in Tehran, Nazgol Ansarinia graduated from the London College of Communication in 2001 before taking a Master of Fine Arts at the California College of the Arts (CCA) in San Francisco in 2003.
Solo exhibitions include: C4, Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein (2022); Lakes Drying, Tides Rising, Green Art Gallery, Dubai, UAE (2022); The Room Becomes a Street, curated by Aram Moshayedi, Argo Factory, Tehran, Iran (2020); Demolishing buildings, buying waste, Green Art Gallery, Dubai, UAE (2018); Fragments, Particles and the Mechanisms of Growth, KIOSK, Ghent, Belgium (2017); Surfaces & Solids, Green Art Gallery, Dubai, UAE (2015); The Free Word Center, London, UK (2011); and Interior Renovations, Green Cardamom, London, UK (2011) amongst others.
Selected group exhibitions include: After Rain, Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale 2024, Riyadh, KSA (2024); NGV Triennial, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia (2023); Some seasons: Fereydoun Ave and the Laal Collection, 1959-2019, Jameel Arts Centre, Dubai, UAE (2023); Utopian Scenario About Nature, Busan Museum of Contemporary Art, South Korea (2023); Vanishing Point, A selection of works from Pejman collection, Argo Factory, Tehran, Iran (2022); The 10th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art (APT10), Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (2021); Hungry for Time, curated by Raqs Media Collective, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, Austria (2021); Reflections: Contemporary Art of the Middle East and North Africa, The British Museum, London, UK (2021); DEMO, MAK Center, Los Angeles, CA (2020); Fragile Frontiers: Visions on Iran’s in/visible borders, YARAT Centre, Baku, Azerbaijan (2019); Revolution Begins at Home, with Architects Hamed Khosravi and Roozbeh Elias-Azar, Sharjah Architecture Triennial, Sharjah, UAE (2019); The Spark is You: Parasol Unit in Venice, curated by Ziba Ardalan, 58th Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy (2019); Women House, Monnaie de Paris, Paris, France (2017); What We Know that We Don’t Know, KADIST, San Francisco, CA (2017); Planet 9, Kunsthalle Darmstadt, Germany (2017); Variable Dimensions, Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology, Lisbon, Portugal (2017); The Eighth Climate (What Does Art Do?), Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju, South Korea (2016); and Adventure of the Black Square: Abstract Art and Society 1915-2015, Whitechapel Gallery, London, UK (2015).
She lives and works in Tehran, Iran.
At Green Art Gallery, Dubai, the Iranian artist Nazgol Ansarinia reimagines the city’s urban decay in various shades of blue.
As her new show opens at Dubai's Green Art Gallery, the artist sheds light on the fast-changing nature of Tehran's architecture and cityscape, as well as her own quest to find home in the Iranian capital.
The sculptural works of the Tehran-based artist, Nazgol Ansarinia, revisit the capital of Iran to underscore the ironies of urban development.
Talking about a city is never easy and always personal. But what if the city you want to talk about is so complex that there are truly no words to properly describe it? Would you fall silent or search for a way to make yourself understood? Nazgol Ansarinia chose the latter. Her approach? Art.
Although these are endlessly difficult times in Iran, both economically and politically, the Iranian capital still shows vibrant signs of cultural life. In an old downtown brewery- turned-art foundation is the fantastic post-industrial site for Argo Factory’s latest show – a palimpsest of the past and pointer for the future.
This list of artists brings together emerging and established Iranian artists working within the country and beyond its borders. Their work offers a fresh introduction to this exciting and underrecognized art scene.
Hannah Jacobi writes about THE SPARK IS YOU: Parasol Unit in Venice, how contemporary Iranian art spans wider influences and art historical representations. The Spark Is You turns to poetry as a lens through which to see Iranian cultural connectivity among the works in the show.
In her work, Nazgol Ansarinia is constantly articulating the disappearance of physical (and public) spaces, not only as a question of functional urbanism but also as a phenomenon of internal displacement.
Iranian artist Nazgol Ansarinia’s work interrogates everyday objects to forge a dialogue with contemporary life in Iran. Tahereh Sariban speaks with the artist in Tehran about her new video works.
Riffing off a vernacular mural tradition, one artist captures the contrasts and contradictions of life in contemporary Tehran.
Nazgol Ansarinia's practice interrogates the current realities of life in Tehran, referencing rapid change and vanishing traditions.
Myrna Ayad reviews Nazgol Ansarinia's Surfaces + Solids exhibition at Green Art Gallery, Dubai.
Published by the Pavillon de l'Arsenale in Paris, the publication Artists and Architecture: Variable Dimensions looks at how the artists's practice stimulates architecture.
Artsy's 50 gallery exhibitions not-to-miss, from Copenhagen to Cape Town, New York to Shanghai.
The Tehran-based artist rethinks, reworks and recasts everyday objects and juxtaposes them against daily life. Lemma Shehadi speaks with Nazgol Ansarinia, who takes things apart before drawing conclusions.
Middle Eastern artists such as Nazgol Ansarinia link Modernism with Arabic and Persian decorative arts.
Exploring the mutual fascination between Iran and Europe through art in Switzerland.
Rising star Nazgol Ansarinia has turned fantastical murals commissioned by the Iranian state into a series of absurdist, arresting architectural models made using a 3D printer.
Five women artists deconstruct the process of photography to illustrate how biases, viewpoints and motives tend to tint reality.
Daniela da Prato from Contemporary Practices takes a close look at Nazgol Ansarinia's different bodies of work.
Nazgol Ansarinia’s work explores the patterns and structures of modern day life. She seeks to portray intangible aspects of social, physical and emotional interactions within the framework of society.
If anxiety is the background hum of our existence, Nazgol Ansarinia is listening very carefully. Over the past fifteen years, she has been producing sharp, understated works that turn up the volume on the unsettling.