Tahia Halim

Tahia Halim
Born (1919-09-09)September 9, 1919
Sudan
Died May 24, 2003(2003-05-24) (aged 83)
Egypt
Occupation painter

Tahia Mohammed Halim (Arabic: تحية محمد حليم) was an Egyptian painter. Tahia Halim is one of the pioneers of the Modern Expressive Movement in Egyptian Art in the 1960s, where she excelled in expressing the Egyptian character’s idiosyncrasies in her works. She has many works concerning the Nile, boats and the popular and national subjects for which she has been granted several honorary awards in Egypt and abroad.

Biography

Tahia Halim was born in Sudan, where her family were living. Her primary education was inside the Royal Palace of Cairo, where she was raised, as her father was the laureate of King Fuad I of Egypt.

Tahia Halim studied art under important drawing teachers as the Lebanese painter Yussef Trabelsi and the Greek artist Gerom; then under the Egyptian artist Hamed Abdallah at his studio 1943, and after their marriage, in 1945, they left for Paris to join Julian Academy (1949-1951). Came back to Egypt, they taught together art in their private studio, in Down Town (near Tahrir Square) in Cairo. Tahia Halim received two devotion scholarships of Art Production in 1960 and in 1975.

Exhibitions

Solo shows-
International exhibitions
Local exhibitions

Prizes

National
International

Collections

Private collection
State collection

References

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