Art bridges cultures and makes us see differently (that’s why the first of my novels-in-progress is titled, “Flamenco & the Sitting Cat”) — look again at these art photos by Abbas Kiarostami, a noted Iranian film producer/director/screenwriter, poet, and photographer.
In his photos, Kiarostami examines the relationship between art and visitors. He shot them at the Louvre, between 1996 and 2012.
My husband happened to visit Iran’s National Museum and generously returned with these photos. Hover over them for descriptions and click on them to see full-sized. Look closely — the people in the front are observers like us…
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7 thoughts on “Part 2: Tehran Visits The Louvre by da-AL”
I can’t wait to show my daughter who is a Fine Arts Major. WOW-WOW-WOW!
A brilliant concept. Art is nothing without people to see it – we complete the image by becoming part of it. Our engagement and internal discussion of art makes up part of the equation of artist, artwork, and viewer. Kiarostami understands this and cleverly, sometimes humorously, makes this extended idea his artwork.
These are wonderful images! Metaphoric layers. My husband and I visited art museums this summer and experienced similar life as art moments. Museums are my favorite adventure.
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I can’t wait to show my daughter who is a Fine Arts Major. WOW-WOW-WOW!
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let us know what she thinks 🙂
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Absolutely!!!!
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A brilliant concept. Art is nothing without people to see it – we complete the image by becoming part of it. Our engagement and internal discussion of art makes up part of the equation of artist, artwork, and viewer. Kiarostami understands this and cleverly, sometimes humorously, makes this extended idea his artwork.
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I love those time mix photos, great idea!
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These are wonderful images! Metaphoric layers. My husband and I visited art museums this summer and experienced similar life as art moments. Museums are my favorite adventure.
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museums are my 2nd fave places — libraries my 1st 🙂
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