Arghavan Khosravi

Arghavan Khosravi

Arghavan Khosravi Paints Worlds Into Being

By the editors at The Collection·April 21, 2026

Artist Spotlight · The Collection Editorial

In the years since her work first began circulating among serious collectors and institutional curators, Arghavan Khosravi has arrived at a position that feels both inevitable and extraordinary. Her paintings command attention at major international venues, and her presence in group and solo exhibitions across the United States and Europe has solidified her reputation as one of the most compelling painters working today. The 2022 and 2023 period marked a particularly fertile chapter, with new editions and mixed media works expanding her practice into thrillingly complex territory that rewards close looking and repeat visits. Khosravi was born in Iran in 1984, and her formation as an artist drew deeply from the visual culture she grew up within.

Arghavan Khosravi — Moonlight

Arghavan Khosravi

Moonlight, 2020

Persian miniature painting, with its flattened pictorial space, jewel toned palette, and intricate narrative layering, became one of the foundational languages of her practice. She later pursued graduate study in the United States, earning her MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design, an institution whose rigorous conceptual environment encouraged her to set that inherited visual tradition into direct dialogue with Western modernism and contemporary painting. The resulting synthesis was entirely her own. Her artistic development traces a clear arc from her earlier, more austere works toward an increasingly material and formally inventive practice.

A work like "A Cement Wall" from 2018, created with acrylic and cement on cotton canvas mounted on a wood panel, signals her interest in using the physical substance of a surface to amplify psychological weight. The cement is not merely texture; it is architecture, barrier, confinement and witness all at once. The female figures she places in and against such environments are never passive. They push, they endure, they look directly back at the viewer with a composure that is itself a form of power.

Arghavan Khosravi — A Cement Wall

Arghavan Khosravi

A Cement Wall, 2018

The works that followed deepened this investment in materiality and meaning. "Moonlight" from 2020 and the "Dreams" editions from 2022 demonstrate how Khosravi has extended her practice into printmaking and mixed media multiples without any dilution of her singular vision. "Dreams," produced as a pigment print on Hahnemühle paper mounted to aluminum panel, finished with wax and red thread and set within the artist's own glazed alder wood frame, is a remarkable object. Every element, from the luminous surface to the thread that traces across it like a scar or a suture, has been chosen with the precision of a painter who understands that the frame is never neutral and the support is always speaking.

The red thread recurs across her work as a motif that carries the weight of connection, constraint, and continuity. "The Morning Light" from 2022 extends this approach further still, combining a handmade archival pigment print collaged onto a natural linen covered book, airbrushed with acrylic and oil, and mounted on woven rayon cloth covered plywood with leather cord finishing. It is a work that insists on being held in the mind as both image and object, a painted book that is also a kind of reliquary. "The Earring" from 2023 introduces UV pigment printed acrylic panels alongside archival pigment printed canvas, mounted on wood and finished with a rubber cord and a three dimensional cast shackle.

Arghavan Khosravi — Dreams

Arghavan Khosravi

Dreams, 2022

That shackle is not decorative. It is a frank and elegant confrontation with the ways in which adornment and restraint have historically been imposed upon women's bodies and lives. Across all of these works, Khosravi's figures meet this reality with grace and with fire. For collectors, the appeal of Khosravi's work lies in its rare combination of intellectual depth and visceral beauty.

Her works function in domestic and institutional spaces with equal authority. The editions she produces are crafted with exceptional care, and her attention to framing, mounting, and finishing means that each piece arrives as a complete environment rather than simply an image. Collectors who have followed her career from the RISD years through her current visibility in major galleries will find that her works hold their meaning over time and reward continued living with. In the market for works by artists at this career stage, her practice represents a compelling proposition, with institutional support from serious venues confirming what many private collectors already understood early.

Arghavan Khosravi — The Morning Light

Arghavan Khosravi

The Morning Light, 2022

Khosravi occupies a distinct position within a broader conversation that includes painters such as Tala Madani, whose work similarly brings formal rigor and psychological intensity to bear on questions of power and the body, and Shahzia Sikander, whose long engagement with the Mughal and Persian miniature tradition as a living and contestable form helped open the space that Khosravi now inhabits with such confidence. One might also place her in dialogue with Kerry James Marshall's insistence on the political weight of figuration, or with the work of Neo Rauch in his willingness to construct psychologically dense, spatially ambiguous painted worlds. Yet Khosravi's voice is finally irreducible to these comparisons. She has built a visual language that speaks from a specific inheritance toward a universal condition.

What Khosravi has achieved is nothing less than the creation of a new iconography for the female subject under historical and political pressure. Her figures are not victims of their circumstances; they are the most intelligent people in every room she paints. They carry the weight of culture, of restriction, of expectation, and they carry it with a composure that transforms that weight into something luminous. At a moment when painting is once again the site of the most urgent conversations about who gets to be seen and how, and what the painted surface can hold and say, Khosravi stands among the artists whose work will define what this era looked like and what it dared to imagine.

For any collector building a practice with genuine depth and vision, her work is essential.

Get the App