Houshang Pezeshknia was born in 1917 in Tehran. His artistic career was short-lived and he was not widely remembered or understood following his death.
One of the pioneers of Iranian modernism between 1947-1949, the artist's work was first exhibited at the Apadana Gallery in 1949. Contemporary academic painters reacted: Jalil Ziapour described it a move towards the reality of painting 'as it should be'; Jalal Ale-Ahmad wrote: 'The new art of this land will eventually be manifest in Pezeshknia's works.'
This outstanding draughtsman preferred imaginative portrait painting, drawing freely yet unfaltering and usually using colour very carelessly. The artist considered himself a humanist painter. His romantic approach towards portraying the life and faces of the tired sun-burnt villagers of his country bears this out.
"A head seeming to have been carved out of coral. A burnt face betraying the passage of time. A combination of Greek and Persian profiles, strong, dignified and radiant. A venerable memory of a woman from Khuzestan province, long after Pezeshknia left the region. His expertise in the technique of combining oil pastels with gouache has enabled him to play masterfully with the effects of texture and color. The defined outlines red and black touches in contrast to the white blank background have given the portrait a monumental quality."