Siyavash Ghassemzadehgan is an Iranian born artist whose work bridges architecture, archaeology, and contemporary installations. Working primarily with concrete, natural stone, and industrial building materials, he constructs forms that appear as fragments of lost structures-ghosts of forgotten temples reemerging in new contexts
His pieces evoke the feeling of unearthed architectural relics, yet they are intentionally embedded within modern environments. With the use of materials associated with both durability and decay, by purely setting pieces atop, Ghassemzadehgan explores the tension between construction and collapse, memory and invention. Each work becomes a search for equilibrium-an attempt to balance mass and emptiness, the industrial and the organic, rawness and grace.
Through this careful orchestration of material and space, Ghassemzadehgan invites a contemplative encounter with form, history, and the built environment. His works do not impose, but rather inhabit space quietly, asking what it means to build-and to remember-in the present.
Siyavash Ghassemzadehgan (b. 1981, Tehran) lives and works in Berlin. He explores the fields of sculpture and film. He studied media science and was a private student of the Iranian filmdirector Aman Manthegi