The artist

Alireza
Hemadani

"Art is memory, emotion, and imagination distilled and preserved through time."

MY STORY
Aurora, Alireza Hemadani, original coloured pencil artwork depicting Emperor penguins under the aurora borealis, Caran d'Ache, 2021
Aurora 21 × 30 cm  ·  2021  ·  Caran d'Ache on Bristol Board

Iran  ·  1991–2006

A New
World.

When we left Iran in 2006, it was just my mother, my sister, and me. We arrived in England in January, in the heart of winter. The days were short, the nights stretched long, and the weather felt endlessly grey and unfamiliar. We said goodbye to everything we knew and stepped into a place of beauty and possibility, yet for a time it felt just out of reach. We could see the world around us, but we could not yet fully step into it. That sense of standing between wonder and uncertainty has stayed with me ever since.

This work draws on that period of my life. A parent shelters two young chicks against an unforgiving landscape, holding warmth and safety at the centre of something vast and unknown. In many ways, it is a portrait of my mother. She carried the weight of change quietly, without letting it fall fully on us, allowing us instead the space to grow into a world that was still unfamiliar.

The aurora holds the emotional core of the piece. Its shifting colour transforms the frozen landscape, turning isolation into possibility. The contrast between the coldness of the environment and the warmth of protection beneath it reflects how I remember those years: challenging, extraordinary, and marked by a quiet resilience.

More than anything, this work is about the people who become our shelter while we find our place in the world.

The inheritance

From Black & White
to Colour.

For most of my artistic life, I worked exclusively in graphite. Black and white felt familiar. It was a language I understood, one that allowed me to focus on form, light, and detail without distraction. Colour belonged to other artists, the ones I admired from a distance. It felt vast, intimidating, and somehow beyond me.

I never planned to make the transition.

After the passing of a close friend's mother, her family offered me something unexpected: her vintage Faber-Castell Albrecht Dürer pencil set. The pencils were beautifully preserved, still housed in their original tin, many barely used. What arrived was more than a collection of materials. It carried a history, a life interrupted, and a creative journey left unfinished.

Accepting them changed my relationship with colour before I had even made a mark on the page. It no longer felt like a medium I was choosing to explore. Instead, it felt like an opportunity I had inherited, one I owed it to someone else to pursue.

Those pencils became my introduction to colour. They transformed my work, opening possibilities I had never allowed myself to consider. More importantly, they changed the way I thought about creativity itself. Art was no longer only about skill or progress. It became connected to memory, generosity, and the unexpected ways people leave a mark on one another.

That original set still sits in my studio. As a reminder that some of the most important directions in life are not the ones we choose for ourselves. They are the ones entrusted to us by others.

Faber-Castell Albrecht Dürer watercolour pencil tin, closed, the inherited set that began Alireza Hemadani's transition from graphite to colour

Faber-Castell Albrecht Dürer  ·  The inherited tin

"Some of the most important directions
are not the ones we choose for ourselves."

Fetch, Alireza Hemadani self-portrait as Sagittarius centaur against the Clifton Suspension Bridge, Bristol, coloured pencil on Bristol board, Caran d'Ache, 2021
Fetch 42 × 59 cm  ·  2021  ·  Caran d'Ache on Bristol Board

Ashton Court, Bristol

A Life
with Zeeba.

I created this piece shortly after moving to a new home near Ashton Court and welcoming my dog, Zeeba, into my life. It was a period marked by new responsibilities, new routines, and a growing connection to the landscape around me. What began as daily walks quickly became something more, a reason to spend hours outdoors, moving through woodland trails and open spaces that soon felt like home.

Sagittarius, being my zodiac sign, is a symbol I have returned to throughout my work as a way of exploring freedom, movement, and instinct. Here, however, the story is no longer solitary. At the edge of the cliff stands Zeeba, poised with the anticipation that only a dog can bring to a simple game of fetch.

Anyone who knows her knows that a ball is never just a ball. It is a mission, an obsession, and a source of endless joy. Much of our time together was spent with a ball in hand, walking further than planned and staying out longer than intended.

Zeeba the Shiba Inu carrying a tennis ball, at home in Bristol
Zeeba the Shiba Inu at Ashton Court park, Bristol, golden hour
Zeeba the Shiba Inu puppy with a KONG tennis ball

Click to browse  ·  Zeeba the Shiba

While the piece contains elements of mythology, its meaning is deeply personal. It is about the sense of freedom that companionship can create. Zeeba brought a spontaneity and energy into my life that encouraged me to explore more, move more, and experience the world with a renewed sense of curiosity.

Fetch is ultimately a celebration of that feeling, the freedom of open space, the bond between human and animal, and the small moments that quietly become some of the most important in our lives.

Zan. Zendegi. Azadi.  ·  2022

What Inspires
the Work.

The subjects of my work often begin with a feeling that stays with me. A memory that refuses to fade. A place that left an impression. A person I want to honour. Occasionally, they emerge from events unfolding far beyond my immediate reach.

Some pieces are deeply personal, rooted in family, childhood, and the people who have shaped my life. Others are inspired by landscapes, stories, and moments of quiet reflection. And sometimes a drawing begins because remaining silent feels more uncomfortable than speaking.

One such work emerged during the protests that swept across Iran in 2022. Watching from thousands of miles away, I experienced a familiar sense of distance: caring deeply about something while feeling powerless to influence its outcome. Drawing became the only meaningful response I knew how to make.

The final image was constructed from multiple references, each contributing a different element to a composition that never existed in reality. A face, a pose, a scarf, a symbol. The process reflected what I find most compelling about art: the ability to assemble fragments of experience into something entirely new.

Not every piece I create carries the same weight, but they all begin in the same place: curiosity, memory, emotion, and the desire to understand something a little more deeply than I did before I put pencil to paper.

Hover a reference photo

Reference photograph used for pose and hands in Zan Zendegi Azadi by Alireza Hemadani
Pose & hands
Reference portrait photograph used for the face and eyes in Zan Zendegi Azadi by Alireza Hemadani
Face & eyes
Zan. Zendegi. Azadi. (Woman. Life. Freedom.), original coloured pencil artwork by Alireza Hemadani, 2022, responding to the Iranian uprising, Caran d'Ache on Bristol board, 42 × 59 cm
Zan. Zendegi. Azadi. 42 × 59 cm  ·  2022
Reference photograph of the Queen's Burberry scarf, used as source material for Zan Zendegi Azadi by Alireza Hemadani
The scarf
Reference photograph of a snake, used for scale and texture detail in Zan Zendegi Azadi by Alireza Hemadani
Snake & scale
Antelope Canyon, original coloured pencil artwork by Alireza Hemadani, Caran d'Ache on Bristol board
Antelope Canyon 30 × 42 cm  ·  Caran d'Ache on Bristol Board
Betta Fish, original coloured pencil artwork by Alireza Hemadani, Caran d'Ache on Bristol board
Betta Fish 30 × 42 cm  ·  Caran d'Ache on Bristol Board

The practice

More Than
a Hobby.

Drawing has been part of my life from a young age, though not always in a serious way.

As a child, I drew when inspiration struck. Through my teens and twenties, I would complete the occasional piece, leave others unfinished, and often go months between drawings. Art was always present, but it lived quietly in the background.

That began to change as I entered my thirties.

Without any grand decision or defining moment, drawing gradually became something I returned to more often. What had once been occasional became intentional. I started setting aside time for it, creating routines around it, and investing in the tools that would allow me to develop further. A proper workspace replaced improvised setups. Better materials replaced whatever happened to be available. More importantly, I began treating the time itself as valuable.

At first, drawing felt similar to meditation. It offered a space away from screens, deadlines, and the constant noise of everyday life. Over time, however, I realised it had become something more than a way to relax.

There comes a point where you realise you have travelled too far down a path to continue treating it as an afterthought.

Today, I still work full-time in the renewable energy industry, a career that has shaped much of my adult life. My art exists alongside it. Most pieces are created in the quiet hours around work, often in short sessions spread across many weeks. A single drawing may contain forty hours or more of work, accumulated one evening at a time.

Some days inspiration is effortless. Other days it feels no different to any other commitment. Much like going to the gym, the value often comes from showing up regardless.

I do not know where this path ultimately leads, and I am comfortable with that. What I do know is that art has become an essential part of how I think, reflect, and experience the world. Each new piece is an opportunity to learn something I could not do before, to attempt a subject that feels just beyond my current ability, and to continue the process of improvement that has quietly been unfolding for years.

Whether it remains a lifelong practice or grows into something more, I intend to keep following it.

The beginning,
black & white era.

Early works  ·  Graphite
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