Hunting Ground

Prehistoric imagery reappears within the wall, as if uncovered rather than applied.

A site-specific intervention engaging with prehistoric visual memory, referencing the imagery of Lascaux cave paintings within a deteriorated urban surface.

 


Public Mural Project – Tehran Municipality, Iran, March 2020


This work is located opposite the Artists’ Park and the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art. The setting brings the project into direct proximity with institutional art spaces, while remaining on a raw and exposed urban surface.

The imagery draws from early representations of animals and movement, inspired by the Lascaux cave paintings. Rather than reconstructing these images as separate references, they are embedded within the existing texture of the wall.

 

The surface itself—exposed brick, faded pigment, and uneven layers—echoes the material condition of cave interiors. This allows the imagery to appear as if it is emerging from the wall, rather than being placed onto it.

 

What becomes visible is a shift in time. The wall functions as a shared ground where traces of early image-making meet the present condition of the city.



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