LACMA

ShopMembershipMyLACMATickets
LACMA
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
5905 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90036
info@lacma.org
(323) 857-6000
Sign up to receive emails
Subscribe
© Museum Associates 2025

Museum Hours

Monday

11 am–6 pm

Tuesday

11 am–6 pm

Wednesday

Closed

Thursday

11 am–6 pm

Friday

11 am–8 pm

Saturday

10 am–7 pm

Sunday

10 am–7 pm

 

  • About LACMA
  • Jobs
  • Building LACMA
  • Host An Event
  • Unframed
  • Press
  • FAQs
  • Log in to MyLACMA
  • Privacy Policy
© Museum Associates 2025
Collections

Shirin Neshat
Speechless1996

Not on view
Black and white photograph of a young person's face, half in shadow, overlaid with handwritten cursive text, wearing a large double-hoop silver earring
Artist or Maker
Shirin Neshat
Iran, Qazvin, active United States, New York, New York City, born 1957
Title
Speechless
Date Made
1996
Medium
Gelatin silver print, ink
Dimensions
Sheet: 66 × 52 1/2 in. (167.64 × 133.35 cm) Frame: 69 1/2 × 56 1/4 × 2 1/4 in. (176.53 × 142.88 × 5.72 cm)
Credit Line
Purchased with funds provided by Jamie McCourt through the 2012 Collectors Committee
Accession Number
M.2012.60
Classification
Photographs
Collecting Area
Art of the Middle East: Contemporary
Curatorial Notes
Shirin Neshat, one of the most famous artists of the Iranian diaspora, is perhaps best known for her landmark photographic series Women of Allah, to which this work belongs. The series portrays chador-clad women in the aftermath of the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Often posed with a rifle or gun, their exposed body parts inscribed in black ink, Neshat’s women are strong, even heroic, eroticized by their weapons and sanctioned by the texts they bear. Here, the print shows the side of a woman’s face, the barrel of a gun emerging like a gaudy earring from the
shadowy area between her cheek and barely visible chador. She stares outward calmly, her face covered with verses by the Iranian poet Tahereh Saffarzadeh, in which she addresses her brothers in the revolution, asking if she can participate. Although the Women of Allah series was created in response to a specific moment in Iranian history, works such as Speechless continue to resonate today.
Selected Bibliography
  • Komaroff, Linda. "Islamic Art Now and Then." In Islamic Art: Past, Present, Future, edited by Sheila Blair and Jonathan Bloom, 26-56. New Haven, New York, and London: Yale University Press, 2019.

  • Komaroff, Linda, Stephanie Rouinfar, Sandra Williams, and Sarah Mostafa Ahmed. Women Defining Women in Contemporary Art of the Middle East and Beyond. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2023. https://archive.org/details/women-defining-women (accessed January 12, 2024).