| Iranian Teahouse Painter Khalili Dies at 64 |
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An Iranian traditional wedding
ceremony has been depicted in a teahouse painting by Ahmad Khalili One of the
last survivors of Iranian teahouse painting, Ahmad Khalili died of lung cancer
at Tehran’s Kasra Hospital on Saturday evening.
Tehran, 14 July 2008: One of the
last survivors of Iranian teahouse painting, Ahmad Khalili died of lung cancer
at Tehran’s Kasra Hospital on Saturday evening.
He was 64 years old.
He taught a small number of students
in his small atelier in southern Tehran before the illness developed.
The Qajar-era Azari Teahouse, which
was restored by Tehran Municipality in 1993, was a favorite haunt of Khalili
over the past few years. Some of his paintings hang in the teahouse.
Khalili was born in Qazvin in 1943.
When he was two years old, his parents relocated to Karvansara-Sangi, a suburb
of Karaj near Tehran. Later when he was four years old, they moved to Tehran.
Ahmad learned painting, woodcarving,
and sculpting during childhood.
At 16, his father, a traditional
architect, introduced him to Mohammad Modabber, one of veterans of the teahouse
painting genre, in order to learn the art.
He also was the student of Hossein
Qollar-Aqassi, a pioneer of this genre.
Ahmad faced difficulties after his
father died in 1967. He had to work to earn a livelihood to support his family,
but he was hired by the state-run TV in 1975 to work as a painter in a section
that made stage decorations. He retired from the position in 1995. However, he
never ignored his career as a teahouse painter.
His paintings have been put on
display along with other works created by other masters of this genre in
numerous galleries both in Iran and abroad.
Religious stories and Iranian epic legends
feature prominently in Iranian teahouse painting.
With their own unique perspective
not used in other styles of painting, artists of this genre draw motifs based
entirely on their imagination.
Unfortunately, Iranian artists and
cultural officials have neglected Iranian teahouse painting over the few past
decades and most of the masterpieces in this genre have not been properly cared
for by their owners.
Many of Iranian teahouse painters
such as Hossein Qollar-Aqassi, Modabber, Hossein Hamedani, Abbas Bolukifar, and
Mohammad Hamidi, died as unknowns.
Source : www.chnpress.com |


