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Reza Abbasi (Persian: رضا عباسی), [a] also known as Aqa Reza (c. 1565 – 1635), [b] was the leading Persian miniaturist of the Isfahan School during the later Safavid period, spending most of his career working for Shah Abbas I. [1]
The Reza Abbasi Museum (Persian: موزه رضا عباسی ) is a museum in Tehran, Iran. It is located in Seyed Khandan . [ 1 ] The museum is named after Reza Abbasi , one of the artists of the Safavid era . [ 2 ]
The Lovers, alternatively titled Two Lovers or Courtly Lovers, is an early 17th-century painting by Iranian artist Reza Abbasi.Done in a combination of ink, watercolor, and gilding on paper, the work depicts a couple of lovers embracing each-other.
The text is known from a 13th century manuscript, possibly composed in Baghdad, now in Tehran, Reza Abbasi Museum (RAM M. 570), also called "RAM al'Sufi".
Ali Reza Abbasi Tabrizi was a prominent Persian [1] calligrapher and calligraphy teacher, who flourished in 16th-17th century Safavid Iran. [2] He was titled by Abbas I as Šāhnavāz Xān . Abbasi was a master of Naskh and Thuluth scripts and the initiator of his own style of Nastaʿlīq script.
Still others- among them Reza Abbasi's son Muhammad Shafi- pioneered genres like the gol o morg (flower and bird), sometimes influenced by European and Mughal models. These artists took cues selectively from European & Mughal conventions, adopting a new approach to light and shadow and to landscape.
Reza Abbasi (1565–1635) miniaturist of the Isfahan School; Mihr 'Ali (fl. 1795– post 1830) royal painter; Kamaleddin Behzad (1450–1535) Farrukh Beg (ca. 1547)
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