On the edge of a large park in Tehran sits a Neo-Brutalist structure the color of sand. Inside is just one of the greatest collections of modern day Western art in the world.

You enter the Tehran Museum of Modern Artwork by an atrium that spirals downward like an inverted version of Frank Lloyd Wright¡¯s Guggenheim Museum. Photographs of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the father of Iran¡¯s 1979 Revolution, and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who succeeded him as the Islamic Republic¡¯s supreme leader, glare down at you.

A series of underground galleries awaits. There is almost nothing fairly like the emotion of coming facial area-to-face for the very first time with its most sensational masterpiece: Jackson Pollock¡¯s 1950 a 6-by-8-foot canvas, which was created with rusty reds and layered swirls of thick, dripped paint and is regarded just one of his very best operates from his most critical interval.