- Title
- Untitled, from the series Elizabeth Taylor in Iran
- Date Made
- 1976, reprinted 2011
- Medium
- Chromogenic development print
- Dimensions
- Frame: 25 × 37 × 1 1/2 in.
Image (Image and sheet): 24 × 36 in.
- Accession Number
- M.2011.70.33
- Collecting Area
- Art of the Middle East: Contemporary
- Curatorial Notes
In 1976 Elizabeth Taylor visited Iran for the first and only time. Accompanying her was Firooz Zahedi, today a successful Hollywood photographer but then a recent art school graduate just learning his craft. Iran provided an exotic and engaging locale for Taylor, a tireless global wanderer still at the height of her fame. For Zahedi, who had left Iran as a child, this was a reintroduction to his own country, which he experienced not only through the camera lens but through Taylor’s eyes. It was a remarkable journey for both as documented by Zahedi’s vivid photographs, shown together here for the first time.
The pair traveled to the main tourist sites: ancient Persepolis, where the Tent City erected in 1971 for the 2,500 year celebration of the Persian Empire was still standing; Shiraz, home of poetry and wine; and Isfahan, renowned for its beautiful tile-clad buildings. Grouped in narrative fashion, the images depict people and places with the actress as tourist, but one so iconic that she is never anonymous even wrapped in a chador. In the Isfahan bazaar, Taylor was attracted to and purchased a traditional tribal outfit. Dressed in this colorful costume and in full make-up, the film star posed as an Oriental odalisque, an especially suitable persona for one who was herself a male fantasy. Though Zahedi took many photographs of Taylor in the years following their Iran trip, none are as personal, candid, or creative as these unique images.