 Please join me on stage. Good evening. It's a true privilege to be here tonight. It's such an honor to receive this award. Obviously I'm very nervous, as it's quite rare for a visual artist such as myself to address influential audience like you and must be rare for you to hear the voice of an artist whose world is realm of fiction. Yes, I'm an artist, but as Picasso once said, art is the lie that enables us to realize the truth. Yes, my work is fiction, but I believe through fiction we can go deeper into human psyche, deeper into reality, deeper into the universe of light of what is like to be a human being on this planet today. I tend to consider artists as conduits, art and culture as a bridge between people and the people of power. I consider art as a form of communication, art as a way to have emotional and intellectual impact on people without having any specific political or ideological agenda. Now, if you've ever doubted the significance of culture in times of political crisis, I beg of you to look at the Iranian culture as an example. Ever since the Islamic Revolution in 1979, where the Iranian image quickly declined from that rich ancient culture of poets and mystics to now suddenly the barbaric land of fanatics and moloss, violence and oppression. It was here, my friends, that Iranian artists and Iranian culture unquestionably became the saving grace of this nation, both in respect to their own people and the world at large. When Iran was burning inside in the aftermath of the Islamic Revolution, when Iranians were kept hostage by their own government, but isolated in the world, when we suddenly woke up to a country where religion ruled the state, when our people were massacred for the smallest gesture of protest, when families began to be separated for good, when the West decided to take revenge and its embargo hit us hard, collapsing our economy and our medical services, when our government deprived us of the basic human rights, the freedom of expression, when artists, intellectuals, regularly became harassed, arrested and at times executed, our artists began to respond. Musicians, writers, filmmakers, visual artists, intellectuals, all people of imagination worked very hard in light of censorship and all the given boundaries and created the most powerful, imaginative, subversive artistic expression which quickly flourished into the world. Now, if I may take this opportunity and give a message to our newly elected president, Mr. Hassan Rouhani, a man whom I respect a great deal and whose initiatives have been much welcomed at home and abroad. I would ask the president if for the past many decades, Iranian artists and intellectuals have protected and preserved our national dignity in the world, now we pass the porch on to you, Mr. President. It is now your turn to be that saving grace of our nation. Mr. President, Mr. President, Iranians living inside and outside the country are badly broken, divided, separated, displaced. Show them unity. Show them democracy. Show them how we are all Iranians despite of our class, religion, Muslims, Christianity, Jews. Mr. President, let us erase the image of a country that fits the description of access of evil. Let's build a new image of a country that could be a model for peace, democracy and justice. And at last, Mr. President, this is for me. Take care of your artist, your intellectuals and accept that art is no crime, that it is every artist's responsibility to make art that is meaningful, that questions tyranny, that questions injustice. It is artist's task to be advocate for change, for peace and unity. And let me end with last quote by Picasso. He says, art washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. Good luck, President. Thank you.