But Meaning…

But Meaning… is a one-to-one scale prototype of a garden design and a staged dialogue between mind and love. Drawing on the languages of painting, sculpture, architecture, and video, the work operates through subtle shifts in meaning across each medium.
Plinths traditionally used to display sculpture function here as monochrome canvases, arranged in a grid across the space. All sculptures are absent except one. A fallen plinth disrupts the order of the abstract colour field, while a tall steel structure introduces architecture into the scene. This vertical element alters the spatial logic and opens a new dimension. With the rhythm of speech, text appears above the horizon line of the plinths, scrolling across the white walls as subtitles for an otherwise silent stage. From this position, the viewer reads the work.
Marco Djermaghian, also known as Marco Say, is an architect living and working between Tehran and Kashan. His practice moves across architecture, moving image, and speculative research. In 2012, he initiated The House of Shams, an art and architecture project centred on the thirteenth-century poet and mystic Jalal al-Din Muhammad Balkhi, also known as Rumi. Conceived as a split institution with physical structures in both Kashan and Tehran, the project develops research around Rumi’s writings through translations, seminars, and a range of media formats. Alongside this, it proposes a journey through contemporary culture and metropolitan life, with Rumi positioned as guide, critic, interlocutor, and agent provocateur.
Venue: Sazmanab (Khaghani St.)
Dates: 15 May – 4 June 2015
Opening reception: Friday, 15 May 2015, 15:00–22:00


















