Mohammadreza Mirzaei

Installation of Mohammadreza Mirzaei's Humans series at Empty Quarter Gallery

Mohammadreza Mirzaei (Persian: محمدرضا میرزایی; born 1986) is an Iranian photographer and writer. He is founding editor of Dide Magazine and was one of the jurors of International Photobook Award in 2011. His photos has been exhibited in different biennials and annuals including Bogotá Fotográfica in 2011 and Journées photographiques de Bienne in 2012.

Life

Mirzaei studied graphic design at IRIB Art School and Italian Literature at Azad University in Tehran. In 2012, he moved to Philadelphia to pursue his MFA at University of Pennsylvania.

Photography

Mirzaei’s photos are usually with a huge graphical approach and wise usage of negative space which have been usually considered as minimalist. In 2006, he did a photo series called Humans, which have been exhibited in 4 solo shows in Iran, Turkey, UAE and Russia[1] as well as in some group exhibitions in Australia and Italy. Michael Kenna has acclaimed this photo series by an essay : Mr. Mirzaei, with reserved sensibility, kindly provides us with an opportunity to quietly reflect and consider the reasons for our existence. It is a worthy subject to ponder, and this is a worthy group of photographs.[2] Mirzaei’s photographs have been also credited by his compatriot photographer Mitra Tabrizian, who admired the surreal quality and the sense of isolation in his works.[3] In 2008, his photo series Rewind won the first prize of the 3rd photo feast of Tehran’s University of Art.

Literature

In 2013, Mirzaei's book What I don't have,[4] which contains a long story and a photo series published in Italy by Edizioni del Bradipo. Mirzaei is also the translator of La Grammatica di Dio, short stories by Stefano Benni from the Italian to the Persian.

Notes

External links

Interviews


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, July 05, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.