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Artists

Parisa Amanellahi

Parisa Amanellahi is an artist and researcher with a background in archaeology, holding both undergraduate and graduate degrees in the conservation of historical buildings. Her artistic practice is shaped by a deep awareness of cultural memory and the fragile endurance of architectural heritage, which she translates into poetic visual narratives.

Her solo exhibition at Seyhoun Art Gallery, The Hikikomori Fell Silent Beneath the Roof’s Shadow, reflects on the silent erosion of identity and place.

Through her work, Parisa creates a dialogue between the remnants of history and the vulnerabilities of the present, reminding us that what crumbles in silence also carries the possibility of renewal.

Arman Sedaghat

Arman Sedaghat is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice spans painting and performance art.
His work explores themes of psychological tension, ambiguity, and perception, often drawing on everyday symbols and systems of visual communication. In his recent solo exhibition Double Vision at Seyhoun Art Gallery, he examines the disorienting nature of decision-making and the blurred boundaries between clarity and confusion through layered compositions in acrylic on canvas.

Combining conceptual depth with visual rhythm, Sedaghat continues to develop a body of work that probes the subtle chaos of contemporary human experience.

Hamideh Momenzadeh

Hamideh Momenzadeh’s paintings explore the meditative power of repetition, where form and rhythm become a pathway to inner reflection. Drawing inspiration from Iranian architectural patterns, she transforms bricks into sacred syllables, crafting compositions that echo both memory and meaning.

Her use of color is deeply intuitive: dark tones evoke silence, depth, and a delicate tension between peace and ambiguity, while vibrant hues express emotional movement and inner vitality. Each work becomes a visual mantra—a tool for focus, a gesture toward harmony.

Rather than depicting the external world, Momenzadeh seeks an inner form. Through repeated patterns and intentional strokes, her paintings invite a quiet gaze—one that leads beyond the surface toward presence, awareness, and self-discovery.

Vahid Ezzatpanah

These intertwined letters of my thoughts,
born from habit and tradition,
break free from routine, rising toward the light
seeking the pure essence of script.

To escape repetition, I became my own inspiration.
In the silence within, beyond the mechanical self,
I found pause in life's constant motion,
embarking on a journey inward
and sat down to witness the outcome.

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