Monday, April 20, 2026

Artist of the Day, April 20, 2026 : Reza Abbasi, an Persian miniaturist painter (#2505)

 Reza Abbasi, also known as Agha Reza (1565 – 1635), was the leading Persian miniaturist of the Isfahan School during the later Safavid period, spending most of his career working for Shah Abbas I. He is considered to be the last great master of the Persian miniature, best known for his single miniatures for muraqqa or albums, especially single figures of beautiful youths.

Riza probably received his training from his father and joined the workshop of Shah Abbas I at a young age. By this date, the number of royal commissions for illustrated books had diminished, and had been replaced by album miniatures in terms of employment given to the artists of the royal workshop.

Unlike most earlier Persian artists, he typically signed his work, often giving dates and other details as well, though there are many pieces with signatures that scholars now reject. He may have worked on the ambitious, but incomplete Shahnameh, now in the Chester Beatty Library in Dublin. A much later copy of the work, from 1628, at the end of Abbas' reign and rendered in a very different style, may also be his. It is now in the British Library. His first dated drawing is from 1601, in the Topkapi Palace. A book miniature of 1601–2 in the National Library of Russia has been attributed to him; the only other miniature in the book is probably by his father. He is generally attributed with the 19 miniatures in a Khusraw and Shirin of 1631–32, although their quality has been criticised.

His speciality, however, was the single miniature for the albums or muraqqas of private collectors, typically showing one or two figures with a lightly drawn garden background, sometimes in gold, in the style formerly used for border paintings, with individual plants dotted about on a plain background. These vary between pure pen drawings and fully painted subjects with colour throughout, with several intermediate varieties. The most typical have at least some colour in the figures, though not in the background; later works tend to have less colour. His, or his buyers', favourite subjects were idealized figures of stylishly dressed and beautiful young men.

The style he pioneered remained influential on subsequent generations of Persian painters; several pupils were prominent artists, including Mo'en Mosavver, who painted his portrait many decades later as well as Riza's son, Muhammed Shafi Abbasi.

His earlier works were signed Aqa Risa (or Riza, Reza etc., depending on the transliteration used), which, confusingly, is also the name of Aqa Riza, a contemporary Persian artist who worked for the Mughal Emperor Jahangir in India. In 1603, at the age of about 38, the artist in Persia received the honorific title of Abbasi from his patron, the shah, associating him with his name. In the early 20th century, there was much scholarly debate, mostly in German, as to whether the later Aqa Risa and Reza Abbasi were the same figures. It is now accepted that they were, although his style shows a considerable shift in mid-career. 

Reza Abbasi, the painter, is also not to be confused with his contemporary Ali Riza Abbasi, Shah Abbas' favourite calligrapher, who in 1598, was appointed to the important position of royal librarian, and therefore in charge of the royal atelier of painters and calligraphers. Both Rizas accompanied the shah on his campaign to Khurasan in 1598 and followed him to the new capital he established in Isfahan from 1597 to 1598. Soon after, Reza Abbasi left the Shah's employ in a "mid-life crisis", apparently seeking greater independence and freedom to associate with Isfahan's "low-life" world, including athletes, wrestlers and other unrespectable types. In 1610, he returned to the court, probably because he was short of money, and continued in the employ of the Shah until his death. A

About the time of his return to court service, there is a considerable change in his style. "The primary colors and virtuoso technique of his early portraits give way in the 1620s to darker, earthier colors and a coarser, heavier line. New subjects only partly compensate for this disappointing stylistic development". He painted many older men, perhaps scholars, Sufi divines, or shepherds, as well as birds and Europeans, and in his last years sometimes satirized his subjects.

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by VisualDiplomacy/Michel Bergeron or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

Reza Abbasi
Sultan Ibrahim 'Adil Shah II in Procession, c.1650's
Drawing with Flowers, Butterflies, and Insects, c.1649-50
Young man in a fur hat, c.1646
Young Portuguese, c.1634
The Old man and the Youth, c.1634
Study oif a bird, c.1634
Musician dressed as a European with viol, c.1630's
Young woman in a white wrap, c.1630
The Lovers, c.1630
Seated youth, c.1630
Hunters at a Stream, c.1627
Youth reading, c.1626
Young man with a sword, c.1622
Cup-bearer, c.1620's
Prince Muhammad-Beik of Georgia, c.1620
Young man with a bottle and a wine cup, c.1610's
Youth kneeling and holding out a wine cup, c.1610
A Youth Fallen From a Tree, c.1610
Saki, c.1609
Qubad Discusses Death before Fighting Barman, c.1600's
Portrait of a Man, c.1600
an in a Fur-Lined Coat, c.1600
Girl, c.1600
Man in a Long-sleeved Coat, c.1598
Reclining woman, c.1595
Lady with a Fan, c.1590-92
Reclining Nude, c.1590
Reclining Nude, c.1590
Prince Killing a Lion, Folio from the Davis Album

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Artist of the Day, April 18, 2026 : Robert Doisneau, a French photographer (#2504)

Robert Doisneau (1912 – 1994) was a French photographer. From the 1930s, he photographed the streets of Paris. He was a champion of humanist photography and, with Henri Cartier-Bresson, a pioneer of photojournalism.

Doisneau is known for his 1950 image Le baiser de l'hôtel de ville (The Kiss by the City Hall), a photograph of a couple kissing on a busy Parisian street.

He was appointed a Chevalier (Knight) of the Legion of Honour in 1984 by then French president, François Mitterrand.

Doisneau used irony in images of juxtapositions, mingling social classes, and eccentrics in contemporary Paris streets and cafes. He was influenced by the work of André Kertész, Eugène Atget, and Henri Cartier-Bresson.

Doisneau's work gives prominence to children's street culture; returning to the theme of children at play in the city, unfettered by parents.

Doisneau's father, a plumber, died on active service in World War I, when his son was about four. His mother died when he was seven. He then was raised by an aunt. At 13, he enrolled at the École Estienne. He graduated in 1929 with diplomas in engraving and lithography and took classes in figure drawing and still life.

When he was 16, he took up amateur photography, starting by photographing cobble-stones before progressing to children and then adults.

At the end of the 1920s, Doisneau found work as a draughtsman (lettering artist) at Atelier Ullmann, a creative pharmaceutical graphics studio. He also acted as camera assistant in the studio and then progressed to a staff photographer.

In 1931, he left both the studio and advertising, taking a job as an assistant with the modernist photographer, André Vigneau. In 1932, he sold his first photographic story to Excelsior magazine.

Three years later, he began working as an industrial advertising photographer for the Renault car factory at Boulogne-Billancourt. Five years later, in 1939, he was dismissed due to repeated tardiness. He then freelanced in advertising, engraving, and postcard photography In 1991, he said that the years at the Renault car factory marked "the beginning of his career as a photographer and the end of his youth."

The same year, he was later hired by the Rapho photographic agency and traveled throughout France in search of picture stories, eventually taking his first professional street photographs.

Doisneau worked at the Rapho agency until the outbreak of World War II, where he was drafted into the French army as both a soldier and photographer. He was in the army until 1940 and, from then until the end of the war in 1945, used his draughtsmanship, lettering artistry, and engraving skills to forge passports and identification papers for the French Resistance.

Some of Doisneau's most recognizable photographs were taken after the war. He returned to freelance photography and sold photographs to Life and other international magazines. He briefly joined the Alliance Photo Agency but rejoined the Rapho agency in 1946 . He remained with them throughout his working life, despite receiving an invitation from Henri Cartier-Bresson to join Magnum Photos.

He refused to photograph women whose heads had been shaved as punishment for sleeping with Germans.

In 1948, he was contracted by Vogue to work as a fashion photographer.

Le Groupe des XV was established in 1946 in Paris to promote photography as art and drawing attention to the preservation of French photographic heritage, and Doisneau joined in 1950 and participated alongside Rene-Jacques, Willy Ronis, and Pierre Jahan. After the group was disbanded, he joined Les 30 x 40, the Club Photographique de Paris.

Doisneau continued to work through the 1970s, producing children's books, advertising photography, and celebrity portraits including Alberto Giacometti, Jean Cocteau, Fernand Léger, Georges Braque, and Pablo Picasso. He also worked with writers and poets such as Blaise Cendrars and Jacques Prévert, and he credited Prevert with giving him the confidence to photograph everyday street scenes.

In 1950 Doisneau created his most recognizable work for Life– Le Baiser de l'hôtel de ville (Kiss by the Hôtel de Ville), a photograph of a couple kissing in the busy streets of Paris, which became an internationally recognised symbol of young love in Paris. It was published on 12 June 1950, part of a photo-essay on couples kissing in Paris. The identity of the couple was unknown until 1992.
© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by  Robert Doisneau or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only 


Robert Doisneau
Les Frères, 1934
L'Œuf Électrique, 1942
Le cheval tombé, 1942
Amour et barbelés, 1944
Boulangerie à Belleville pendant l'occupation, 1945
L'Innocent, 1945
Rue Marcellin Berthelot, Choisy-le-Roi, 1945
La Mariée chez Gégène, 1946
Juliette Gréco, Saint-Germain-des-Prés, 1947
L’Homme à l’Oreille, 1947
Le Regard Oblique, 1948
Un Regard Oblique, 1948
L'Innocent, 1949
Rue Royale, Paris, 1949
Le Baiser Blotto, 1950
Le baiser de l'hôtel de ville, 1950
The Bouquet of Daffodils, 1950
L'Enfer, 1952
In the Subway, 1953
L'innocent, 1954
Jacques Prévert, Rue Lhomond, 1955
Giacometti dans son atelier, 1957
La maison de carton, 1957
Le Violoncelle, 1957
At the Café, Chez Fraysse, 1958
La cabine de Lanvin, 1958
Dancers outside the Kentucky Club on Valette Street, 1959
Le Petit Balcon, 1963
La gargouille de Notre-Dame, 1969
Un chien à roulettes, 1977
Les tabliers de la rue de Rivoli, 1978
Square du Vert-Galant