Scientific Quarterly Journal

Tree-Home: The Uncanny Trees in the Paintings of Davoud Emdadian

Volume 17, Issue 72
Autumn 2025
Pages 40-49

Document Type : Original Research Article

Authors

1 Department of Visual Arts, School of Arts & Architecture,Yazd University, Yazd, Iran

2 Department of Art Research, Faculty of Arts, University of Neyshabur, Neyshabur, Iran

Abstract
It would be a struggle to find a painter like Davoud Emdadian, who has been so faithful to the “tree” as an exclusive painting subject, within the history of Iranian landscape painting. Beyond the shape and placement of these trees in composition, their recurrence in his works has intensified their mystery. This study outlines said trees as an uncanny phenomenon and analyzes them in the same vein. The study adopts a psychological approach based on Sigmund Freud’s conceptual formulation of the “uncanny,” attempting to provide a coherent and precise analysis of the “how” of tree representation with the works of Emdadian. The study utilizes a descriptive-analytical method, employing purposive sampling to select works of art for analysis from Davoud Emdadian’s works, that could demonstrate the various dimensions and key components of tree representation. The study employed a library-based approach to data gathering. The research findings indicate that in terms of form, a similar structure is recurring in the majority of Emdadian’s works. In this structure, “something” is placed in the center of the work, covering most of the canvas, which often assumes the form of a tree. While alien and imposing, the tree is also familiar and close, possessing the fundamental dialectic that constructs the experience of “uncanny”. Typically, this massive tree is accompanied by signs of loss in the form of decay and ruin in the depiction of houses or small trees. These losses and the melancholic aspect gain a deeper and more pronounced dimension in the figures of massive central trees. This constant “repetition” of the uniform tree theme in Emdadian’s works could signify “repetition compulsion” and a transition from the principle of pleasure towards return, indicating a shift from residing in lost temporary dwellings towards an eternal tranquility at the borders of death, on to an eternal home.

Keywords

Subjects
Barrett, E. (2023). Kristeva Reframed: Interpreting key thinkers for the art (M. Parsa, Trans.). Shavand. (Original work published 2011)
Boothby, R. (2021). Death and desire:psychoanalytic in Lacan ‘s return to Freud (A. Rostamiyan, Trans.). Bidgol Bookstore. (Original work published 1991)
Burnham, D. (2019). An introduction to Kant’s Critique of judgement (M. Abolghasemi, Trans.). Nashr-e-Ney. (Original work published 2000)
Cohen, J. (2018). How to Read Freud (S. Najafi, Trans.). Nashr-e-Ney.
Connon, D. (2010). Subjects not-at-home: Forms of the uncanny in the contemporary French novel. Brill.
Delloye, Ch. (1993). UN SYMBOLISME NON NARRATIF [Non-Narrative Symbolism: Davoud Emdadian]. In Musée des années trente (Ed.), Davoud Emdadian “Arbres”: Exposition du 11 octobre au 30 décembre 1993, Musée Municipal de Boulogne-Billancourt. Société Historique et Artistique.
Emdadian, D. [@davoodemdadian_foundation]. (2017, January, 28). Silence - 195 x 150 - oil painting - 2000 [Painting], Instagram. https://www.instagram.com/davoodemdadian/p/BPzUai9Djuj/?hl=fa 
Emdadian, D. [@davoodemdadian_foundation]. (2021a, February, 28). Davood Emdadian, Echo - watercolor - 37x37,5 - 2003 [Painting], Instagram. https://www.instagram.com/davoodemdadian/p/CKyUbexBtSL/?hl=fa&img_index=1 
Emdadian, D. [@davoodemdadian_foundation]. (2021b, December, 28). Davood Emdadian, Île des morts - 55x55 - pastel – 2001, Hommage à l’île des morts d’Arnold Böcklin [Painting], Instagram. https://www.instagram.com/davoodemdadian/p/BcZSDekF85a/?hl=fa&img_index=1 
Falcao, L. (2023). Primordial anxiety, drive, and the need for the progressive movement (S. Talayizadeh, Trans.). Negah.  (Original work published 2013)
Freud, S. (2003). Beyond the pleasure principle (Y. Abazari, Trans.). Arghanoun, 9(21), 25-82. (Original work published 1384)
Freud, S. (2021). The uncanny (M. Parsa, Trans.). Shavand. (Original work published 1919)
Freud, S. (2023). Inhibition, Symptoms, and anxiety (S. Talayizadeh, Trans.). Negah. (Original work published 2013)
Hakim. V. (2018). امر شگفت: کشف دربارة واقعیت [The uncanny: Discovering reality again]. Herfe: Honarmand, 16(67), 21-20. [in Persian]
Johnson, L. R. (2010). Aesthetic anxiety: Uncanny symptoms in German literature and culture. Leiden. Brill. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789042031142 
Kant, I. (2009). Kritik der urteilskraft [Critique of  judgment] (A. Rashidian, Trans.). Nashr-e-Ney. (Original work published 1970)
Kligerman, E. (2007). Sites of the uncanny: Paul Celan, specularity and the visual arts. De Gruyter. 
Lefrancois, M. (1993). HISTOIRES O’ARBRES [The story of trees]. In Musée des années trente (Ed.), Davoud Emdadian “Arbres”: Exposition du 11 octobre au 30 décembre 1993, Musée Municipal de Boulogne-Billancourt. Société Historique et Artistique.
Mashlan, A. (2021). جایگاه امر غریب در مجموعه آثار فروید [The place of the uncanny in the complete works of Freud] (M. Parsa, Trans.). In Z. Freud (Ed.), The uncanny. Shavand. [in Persian]
McAfee, N. (2006). Julia Kristeva (M. Parsa, Trans.). Nashr-e Markaz. (Original work published 2004)
Musée des années trente. (1993). Davoud Emdadian “Arbres”: Exposition du 11 octobre au 30 décembre 1993, Musée Municipal de Boulogne-Billancourt. Société Historique et Artistique. https://bibliotheques-specialisees.paris.fr/ark:/73873/pf0000045045 
Niknam, S. (2008). داود امدادیان: درخت سمبل نبود [Davood Emdadian: The tree was not a symbol]. Tandis, 10(143), 4-5. [in Persian]
Omrani, M. (2018). داوود امدادیان و جست‌وجوی امر شخصی [Davoud Emmadian and the search for personal matters]. Herfe: Honarmand, 16(67), 21-24. https://l1nq.com/8XoYa [in Persian]
Tardieu, J. (1993). À l’ombre des grands arbres [In the Shadow of Massive Trees]. In Musée des années trente (Ed.), Davoud Emdadian “Arbres”: Exposition du 11 octobre au 30 décembre 1993, Musée Municipal de Boulogne-Billancourt. Société Historique et Artistique.
Vidler, A. (1992). The architectural uncanny: Essays in the Modern unhomely. Cambridge: MIT Press.