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Collections

Abbas Kowsari
Tehran Azadi Stadium- National Championship of Iranian Body Builders2006

Not on view
Color photograph of an oiled, muscular man in a bodybuilding pose, shirtless with a competition number tag, in front of a crinkled orange plastic tarp with barred windows above
Artist or Maker
Abbas Kowsari
Iran, born 1970
Title
Tehran Azadi Stadium- National Championship of Iranian Body Builders
Place Made
Iran
Date Made
2006
Medium
Print on metallic photography paper
Dimensions
27 9/16 × 39 3/8 in. (70 × 100 cm) Sheet: 29 7/8 × 43 in. (75.88 × 109.22 cm)
Credit Line
Purchased with funds provided by Harvey and Beth Plotnick
Accession Number
M.2015.97.2
Classification
Photographs
Collecting Area
Art of the Middle East: Contemporary
Curatorial Notes

This pair (see M.2015.97.1) of seemingly homoerotic images is part of a larger group documenting a government-sponsored national bodybuilding championship in Tehran. In one, the photographer Abbas Kowsari has deliberately captured and frozen in time an onstage kiss between two contestants, perhaps a congratulatory gesture but eroticized by their shiny, rippling, nearly nude bodies pulled close together by their handshake. The other photograph shows a heavily spray-tanned contestant striking an offstage pose for the camera, while through windows behind him young men peer in, one of them filming with his mobile phone. The frenzy of the voyeurs contrasts with the still concentration of the bodybuilder, who, despite his well-muscled physique, appears naked and vulnerable to their visual onslaught.

Kowsari has worked as a photojournalist and photo editor for a number of leading Iranian newspapers, most of them, as he has pointed out, now banned. As a documentarian of everyday life in Iran, he captures imagery not commonly seen in the Western media, while his press credentials have provided him with rare opportunities as a fine art photographer. Along with Newsha Tavakolian (whose work is on view here), he belongs to a new generation of artists who use and manipulate photography to create a subtle commentary on contemporary Iranian society.