freeDimensional

Against Oppression—Kianoush Ramezani’s Drawings {World Policy Blog #5}

Posted on December 23, 2010 | No Comments

Dear fD friend: Can you make a donation of $10-25 so we can continue supporting courageous artists like Kianoush in 2011?

A green ribbon tied to a forlorn tree stump, its shadow creating an outline of a human hand. The index and middle finger are raised—a peace sign. This cartoon, by exiled Iranian artist Kianoush Ramezani, comments on Iran’s budding Green Movement. The movement, and the cartoon, has stirred up controversy.

After Iran’s presidential elections in 2009, 150 Iranian intellectuals, journalists and bloggers were forced to leave the country after intense government pressure and oppression. Ramezani decided not to practice self-censorship after postelection repression, and instead created many cartoons Magliette Calcio A Poco Prezzo reflecting the country’s own political unrest. But after seeing many of his close friends incarcerated, Ramezani knew there was no choice but to leave his family and his home. Ramezani relocated to France, where he is seeking political asylum.

freeDimensional learned that Ramezani was living on the streets in Paris, unable to afford housing. Ramezani was the first recipient of the Creative Resistance Fund, which annually awards an exiled artist with one travel and accommodation grant. Now, he can help those protesting against the new regime, work peacefully with his new group, Iranian Green International Cartoon Exhibition, and publish cartoons about the crackdown and repression of the Iranian people, all without fear of being censored or going to jail. His new work reflects on his status as a refugee. He says that his next pieces will definitely be about “a person with a body or soul that is incomplete Cheap NFL Jerseys that is kept away from his homeland.”

by Vivian Lee

The World Policy Journal is featuring five freeDimensional stakeholders on its blog this Fall in relation to its current issue, The Creative Canon.

Illustration courtesy of the artist.

Comments

Leave a Reply





Sign up for our newsletter