London based Iranian-British artist Shirin Tabeshfar has focused her work on the relationship between order and chaos. A painter whose canvases are often divided, she combines elements of symbolism, spirituality and a sense of time in her work.
Shirin was born in Tehran and studied at the Behzad school of Fine Art before she moved to the UK in 1977 where she studied combined art in Bristol and later studied for a BA in Graphic Design at Bath Academy of Art.
Shirin’s work often explores images of the past and clearly, years of patient and laborious research has moved her painting towards a simplification of forms to the extreme. Liberated almost from the subject, Shirin tries to challenge the world of forms. She attains a kind of abstraction both rigorous and poetic.
From tableau to tableau we discover a change in the layout of her canvas, drips of paint sometimes fill the whole space. One’s gaze is lost in a maze of lines, all in a continuous composition, without edges or centre. Yet the layout of the lines keeps the impression of the order and the controlled gesture by the artist.
“Shirin's art manages to keep its innate freshness, in a world of silent poetry.”
Afsaneh H.S Djavadi — Art historian
Shirin’s paintings have been exhibited widely with shows at Josie Eastwood Art Gallery, the Cricket Fine Art Gallery, Gallerie 27 Concept, the Tabernacle Gallery, and the Fairfax Gallery, Highgate contemporary gallery and The Royal college of Art.
Exhibitions