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The Renaissance Of Iranian Art
13. maj/svibanj, 2010.
Selected works of prominent Iranian artists.
5
Mohamed Ehsai, 71, is a master calligrapher who lives and works in Iran. His works have been shown worldwide, and he is now the only artist-calligrapher still commissioned by private patrons from across the Arab world. He has many supporters in Iran, where he leads several art institutions and calligraphy studios.
6
This 2009 piece is titled "Our God Is Great," the work of a young artist who goes by the nickname of "Termeh." Iranian art critic Hamid Dabashi says the Green Movement -- an opposition movement that emerged after the country's disputed election last June -- "has been extremely conducive to her [Termeh's] creative imagination." Her work, he says, has become "definitive" to the movement.
7
Multimedia artist Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, 87, was born in Qazvin, Iran, and spent many years in America before returning to live and work in Tehran. She worked as a commercial artist and designer in New York for 10 years until she discovered the art of geometrical mirror mosaics during a 1957 visit to Iran. Her reputation grew in the 1970s, with major exhibitions in Paris and New York. She fled to New York after the Islamic revolution of 1979 and did not return to Iran until 2000. In recent years her work has been in great demand, with exhibitions and buyers' interest from around the world.
8
Mona Shomali, 31, was in her mother's womb when she fled Iran. Her mother, a member of Iran's persecuted minority Bah'ai faith, raised her daughter in Los Angleles -- home to the largest Iranian diaspora community. Her father, who taught Iranian Studies at Stanford University, raised his daughter with a keen awareness of her country's history and culture. This painting, titled "Persecution and Prayer," is from her "Naked Folklore" series.
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The Renaissance Of Iranian Art
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