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Salar Bil

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Salar Bil
File:Salar Bilehsavarchian (6).jpgSalar_Bilehsavarchian_(6).jpg Salar_Bilehsavarchian_(6).jpg
Salar Bilehsvarchian known as Salar Bil is an Iranian fashion designer
BornSalar Bilehsvarchian
(1993-05-01) 1 May 1993 (age 31)
Iran, Tehran
💼 Occupation
Fashion designer
🌐 Websitewww.salarbil.com
🥚 TwitterTwitter=
label65 = 👍 Facebook

Salar Bilehsvarchian known as : Salar Bil (Persian: سالار بيل ) (born May 1, 1993) is an fashion designer.

Salar Bilehsavarchian is the forefather of conceptual fashion based in Tehran, that three person of BoF 500 People Shaping the Global Fashion Industry mentioned he’s The Godfather of conceptual fashion based in Tehran[1]ery openly himself living in one of the largest metropolitan of Western Asia, the one who started his career with context for collections when no one was doing that kind of connected conceptual fashion concepts in Tehran, he was the hottest designer back in 2015[2]Bilehsavarchian was born on 1st May 1993 with the alter ego Salar Bil, an alternate self referring to fictional literature and other narrative persona of him that broke the super-ego which means the ethical of the personality that provides the moral standards, he broke the idealized self-image in Iran, he was openly non-binary from the beginning and pave the way for lots of queers and empowered them as assistants and team workers[3].he’s an artist, writer, translator who has worked for years in the field of underground art, under strict laws.[4].He works actively in the fields of filmmaking, photography, directing, stage design, painting, collages, fashion, theatrical costumes, hair and make up, at the same time as a voice for aspiring artists and the injustices of double standards, he professionally started studied cinema and made several works, but did not continue and instead studied textile design for BA. and after that Research Master's degree in Arts and Culture and educting himself with appropriation art and taking the ownership of art, because after conceptual you should lead to concepts that the new work re-contextualizes your soceity’s background and you can make multicultural artworks from it, he is making new waves with academic articles and contacts with important icons of the art world. However, their designs were in TIME and The Guardian UK, Vogue , L’Obs, he was mentioned in BoF when he was studying fashion in university as a twenty year old man[5]. he mentioned in BoF about one of Iran’s pioneer successful in market, he’s making new waves with Patti Smith, Christina Aguilera, Grimes, Amanda Palmer, Erykah Badu, Cat Power and Peaches and in the fashion world by Adrian Joffe, Stefano Pilati, Michèle Lamy and many others[6].He is the ambassador of Tom of Finland as well, Daniel Lismore as his figure pictured him as Martha Graham in David LaChapelle’s “The Bad Boy of Ballet and the Bombshell” and another personage in “Kate, the Great” with Kate Moss, he tries to write to make a important impact for the industry of the world for next decades[7].He was even imprisoned by state artists who tried to sexual bully him; Saber Abar and Pantea Panahiha who are working in the projects that are produced by embezzlers[8].we know that sexual bullying is a type of harassment that occurs in connection with a person’s sex, body, sexual orientation or with sexual activity that can be physical, and/or emotional that means taking someone under control for her or his arousing or characterized by intense feeling; so he fought back the abusers and Tom of Finland wrote about iran’s problems after that the foundation warned the abusers, he is still promoting LGBTQIA and feminism that are illegal in Iran[9].He made revolutionary street performances from Kim Gordon’s support to Laurie Anderson, Bil made the street performances from the start of COVID-19 pandemic for freedom fighting both ladies and queers with political texts, he made dog airmasks before the corona virus disease and after his revolutionary performances surprisingly the #MeToo movement that is a social activity about sexual abusing began in Iran, he started open the door to the next decade of his career with collections and context, Nobel Prize winner Patti Smith made him special gifts and empowered him as a punk literature icon and her friend and admirer & Xtina wrote her appreciation letters and a signature on his childhood painting of her. He also made clothing’s for Christina Aguilera, Ellen von Unwerth, Róisín Murphy, Boy George and many others, Daniel Lismore is his figure in the fashion world[10].but he’s not selling his products and he believes for a change in the fashion industry he wrote about the Anthropocene age for Fashion Revolution in Iran and the global branch, which is a not-for-profit global movement represented by The Fashion Revolution Foundation and Fashion Revolution CIC with teams in over 100 countries around the world. Back in 2015 he made a blue-tag line for The World Food Programme, he went from sustainable development from food like WFP to articles about sustainable fashion, he pictured a conceptual dialectic collection that made lots of waves in Iran’s industry : androgynous Galm rock of Bandarabbas in front of Anti-capitalism Bi-On-ic. 7zār Metaphysical,all kind of Muslims in front of Curtain of 7zār that was the stage of ladies. False Dichotomy that is accepting everyone’s truth in front of Bipolar that was about losing the desire to keep on going. Ecological feminism, branch of feminism that examines the connections between women and nature and in front of it sheathing the sword of consumerism and after that he visioned individualism and collectivism in front of poetry of liberty about an anti-Iranian occupying regime, after that he made different collections with context and he is working underground with no waves of accomplishment and respect to liberty of people around the world, he’s doing his part for academic articles with important icons of the world[11].for 2020 decade he step into articles and he opened up “Exit, Voice, and Loyalty” and from everyday blues Afro-Iranians he went to punk for “voice”,Persian couture for “loyalty” and “exit” was about faceless trafficker, his goal is educating himself with the advices from icons of the world and interact with them til he can affect worthy for the culture of the world, Exit, Voice, and Loyalty is a treatise written by Albert O. Hirschman that he tried to picture and present in a trilogy,and after that trilogy “The Rhetoric of Reaction: Perversity, Futility, Jeopardy “ was his study, he challenged from feminism and queerness to a great path of activities with a meaningful body of work, he broke the boundary between men and women and in his interviews explained that there’s no differences between any kind of gender, and they showed him as a curropt person and a threat on the most important TV news[12].because of their difficulties in life, on the other hand Bipolar was a soul searching that was about human nature to want to protect the shadow from painful or negative feelings and experiences at the same time project back to the negative feelings that people label the soul and make us fascination, from “Neo-romanticism” of Glam rock he went to Ecofeminism trilogy that was supplement of his own perfection and not like his other collections very messy and imperfect, it was about the spotless material world has become objects from our mother nature that is in a danger, on the other hand the “frugality” of Glam rock that was about plastic trash coutures and consumerism, after that his fighters in the desert fought for horizon and vertical individualism and collectivism[13].then he went to Northern Iran with no concept and just the balladry and freedom and authorization for different characteristics[14]. This was his first step that entered the art-world with fashion, after that he made many collections that are in no waves and are just about bringing knowledge and poetry and being needless and free about people’s approval. Most of queers in Iran are in closet, although Salar is into girls but he supported them from the beginning and they don’t even know how to get rid of stigmas or a mark of disgrace associated with a particular, because we know that they are different from the minority so it’s so important to embrace the seemingly bad labels like strange, peculiar and Salar did support prostitution that brought him huge, lots of controversy he broke the idealized self-image, or ego ideal and he knew that’s gonna lose lots of supports by society, he did not work with nationalism events,markets and celebrities, he was aware that lots of Iranian women are under pressure, so after his revolutionary street performances and openly showing the emotional abusers of himself to the people of the artworld[15].lots of Iranian women that some of them are salar’s friends of various backgrounds with different histories have taken to social media, in their own #MeToo movement, to report their experiences of sexual harassment and assault. The police have announced they have taken action against at least one suspect. Many women hope this will be just the beginning of a broader movement against sexual violence, social media has undoubtedly been a great amplifier and connector.[16].allowing Iranian women to read one another’s stories as well as the experiences of women in other countries. But where Iranian women are standing today is also the result of years of work on the ground by Iranian women’s rights defenders and ordinary women who have fought to be recognised in society. So he made his part for ladies and queers that are unfairly under-pressure in Iran, and now is all about focusing on his path to make something valuable for his culture in the art-world no matter popular or acceptable but his own beliefs and truth and studies that he realized that is his path that help Iran to come out of shadow[17].

References[edit]

  1. "based in Tehran fighting for his rights". ashadedviewonfashion. Retrieved 12 August 2022. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  2. "IRAN. Tehran. 2015. Iranian men during a fashion show by Iran's hottest designer Salar Bil. This show is a part of Tehran's Fashion Week, which was organized in June for the second time. Fashion shows and modelling have long been illegal in Iran, foridden under its interpretation of Islamic laws, recently though the attitute towards fashion and modelling is changing". jstor. Retrieved 12 August 2022. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  3. "Salar Bil, non-binaire, créateur de mode en Iran". nouvelobs. Retrieved 11 May 2022. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  4. "Salar Bil". the-edge-mag. Retrieved 4 Apr 2022. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  5. "unlocking the enigma of iran". businessoffashion. Retrieved 2 Apr 2022. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  6. "Salar Bil, an Iranian artist based in Tehran fighting for his rights". businessoffashion. Retrieved 6 September 2022. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  7. "Salar Bale's collaboration with famous English and American artists". cafemod. Retrieved 11 Feb 2020. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  8. "Salar Bil, an Iranian artist". the-edge-mag. Retrieved 16 Feb 2021. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  9. "Salar Bil is an artist from Iran". tomoffinland. Retrieved 30 June 2020. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  10. "FASHION IN MOTION WITH DANIEL LISMORE AT V&A". blog.andrewlalchan. Retrieved 15 June 2019. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  11. "Salar Bil GLAMOUR OF BANDAR – THOUGHTS ON GLOBALIZATION". sphere-radio. Retrieved 16 February 2022. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  12. "IRANIAN FASHION DESIGNER SALAR BIL ON LIVING UNDER A "SEXUAL APARTHEID"". missionmag. Retrieved 27 Apr 2022. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  13. "Biography of Salar Bil Salar Bil, an Iranian fashion designer who was introduced by the American magazine Time". seemorgh. Retrieved 1 December 2015. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  14. "Iran: A Personal View". magnumphotos. Retrieved 1 Dec 2021. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  15. "Iran arrests models in renewed crackdown on unlicensed industry". theguardian. Retrieved 16 May 2016. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  16. "Two lesbians and LGBTQI+ activists sentenced to death in Iran". eastofseattle. Retrieved 4 September 2022. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  17. "See Iran Coming Out of the Shadows". time. Retrieved 5 Nov 2015. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)

External links[edit]