Abolhassan Khan Sadighi
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Master Abolhassan Khan Sadighi | |
Birth name | Abolhassan Khan Sadighi |
Born | 1894 Tehran, Iran |
Died | 1995 |
Nationality | Iranian |
Field | sculpture and painting |
Training | Master Kamal al-Molk Ghafarri |
Works | Ferdowsi, Amir Kabir, Avicenna, Khayyam and Nader Shah statues |
Abolhassan Sadighi (Persian استاد ابوالحسن خان صدیقی Ostād Abolhassan khān Sadighī) (1894 – 1995) was one of the most prominent Iranian sculptors and painters and was known as the Master Sadighi.
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[edit] Biography
He was born in Tehran in 1894. Influenced by his family's encouragement, he entered the Alliance school after finishing his primary education. There, while learning various subjects, he instinctly was attracted to painting and drawing without any teaching or guidance.
His love for painting and drawing went on to become the student of Master Kamal al-Molk Ghaffari and soon due to his untiring efforts he became one of the most remarkable art students of the Master Kamal al-Molk. At the end of his educational time in the School of Fine Arts (مدرسه صنایع مستظرفه) that Master Kamal-al-Molk, appointed him as an instructor of painting and drawing to that school.
Shortly after his employment he began to find himself with a secret attraction towards sculpture. Without adequate means, he ventured to create his first stucco bust of a child and offered it to his great Master, Kamal-al-Molk. Master Abolhassan Khan Sadighi's innovative first sculpture was the beginning of a new movement in the art of sculpture in modern-Iran.
After numerous experiences in creating plaster sculptures, he made his first stone sculpture on a stucco model of Venus de Milo. The sculpture received so much credit and praise that Kamal-al-Molk took his apprentice and the Venus sculpture to the Imperial Court, and introduced him to Ahmad Shah of the Qajar dynasty. Then, after that meeting, he was offered a monthly salary from the order of Ahmad Shah and then became the director of the School of Delicate Crafts. Upon this honor, he totally devoted himself to sculpture and made sculptures from both plaster and stone. These sculptures, such as the bust Ferdowsi on the Eagle's Wings, the full statue of Amir Kabir, and the most memorable of all, Haji Moqbel the Black Flute Player.
In 1928 Kamal-al-Molk was exiled to Hosseinabad of Neyshabur, which Master Abolhassan found it hard to endure that, with a tiny amount of money that he had saved throughout the years, he left Iran for Europe. In Europe he visited many countries, and for four years he studied sculpture at Ecole des Beaux-Arts in France. His teacher was Ange Albert, the skillful master of sculpture in Beaux-Arts.
In Beaux-Arts he managed to prove himself more talented in competition with other art students at Ecole. During his stay in Europe, he created, in addition to sculptures, some works in oil and watercolour which showed the influenced he got from the new European art movements of the time.
In 1932, after returning to Iran, he accepted a request, in obedience, from his exiled Master Kamal-al-Molk to re-open the School of Delicate Crafts and be its director. Once again, the school became a center of visual art, which played a major role in the development of sculpture in modern Iran.
The School of Delicate Crafts lasted almost to the death of Master Kamal-al-Molk, and then was closed. Sometime later the school rematerialised in another form of art school, under the new name which is called the Institute of Fine Arts (هنرستان هنرهای زیبا), under the patronage of the Ministry of Art and Culture, in which tMaster Sadighi taught sculpture in the institute.
A few years after the school was established, it joined as a part of Tehran University. It then became known as the Faculty of Fine Arts and had various art branches, including a department for sculpture under the supervision of Master Sadighi and retired from Tehran University in 1967.
In addition to teaching sculpture to numerous art students and creating many artistically valuable oil and watercolour paintings, Master Sadighi showed his artistic genius by making the huge and monumental stone statue of The Angel of Justice, which was 2.70 meters high and which was commissioned by the Ministry of Justice. This statue is undoubtedly one of the masterpieces of sculpture not only in Iran, but throughout the entire World.
In 1950, Master Sadighi accepted a membership into the National Art Works Society and entered the most creative period of his life. He mad many lasting statues of celebrated men of literature and science of Iran such as Sheikh Sa'di of Shiraz, Ferdowsi of Tus, the great philosopher and physician Abu Ali Sina (Avicenna), and the bronze statue of Nader Shah Accompanied by His Horseman, which was cast in Milan, Italy. The most important of his works during that period was the monumental and magnificent Statue of Ferdowsi, which was set up in Villa Borghese Square of Rome and made the sculptor well known to European art societies.
The career of Master Abolhassan Khan Sadighi as a sculptor ended, in fact, by making busts and statues of the Iranian poet and philosopher Khayyam. He then isolated himself from the art world almost entirely, and spent time raising his family.
Abolhassan Khan Sadighi died in 1995
[edit] Artworks
[edit] Sculptures
[edit] Source
- Hadi Seyf, Master Abolhassan Khan Sadighi; The Michelangelo of the East, (LINK); accessed March 02, 2007.
[edit] External links
- Dedicated Webpage, The Life and Arts of Master Abolhassan Khan Sadighi, ([1]);
- Iranian.com, The master, Paintings & sculptures of Abolhassan Khan Sadighi, (LINK); accessed March 02, 2007.