Channel
Turbulent
Shirin Neshat
Turbulent (1998)
9 mins 38 secs
Turbulent (1998) is a two-screen video installation demonstrating the binaries in Iran's musical history. Between the dark and the light, the male and the female, the spiritual and the physical, we are confronted with social constructs, cultural loss, and that which can be regained.
'An important aspect of Turbulent is that women in Iran are prohibited from singing in public, and there are no recordings by female musicians. The piece took off in various directions and brought about other important questions about the male and female contrast in relation to the social structure. The ultimate question was how each would go about reaching a level of mystical expression inherent in the Sufi music.'
– Shirin Neshat.[1]
Turbulent, 1998. Video installation, black-and-white, sound; 10 minutes.
Conceived and directed by: Shirin Neshat.
Director of photography: Ghasem Ebrahimian.
Female performer, vocalist, and composer: Sussan Deyhim. Male performer: Shoja Azari.
Vocalist for male performer: Shahram Nazeri.
Music for male performer composed by: Kambiz Roshan Ravan.
Producer: Bahman Soltani.
Production supervisor: Mario Chioldi.
Read an interview between the performer Sussan Deyhim and Channel Commissioning Editor, Sheyma Buali, here.
[1] Shirin Neshat, interviewed by Arthur C. Danto, Bomb Magazine 73 (2000): http://bombmagazine.org/article/2332/shirin-neshat