Fakhreddin Mokhbari's Paintings
The realist painter Master Fakhruddin Mokhbari was born in Sarab city, in the province of Tabriz, around 1342. At the age of nineteen, he began his professional career under the tutelage of renowned Iranian realism painter Morteza Katouzian. He was Iran's best realism painter, in addition to taking part in the free workshops offered by the University of Tehran's Faculty of Fine Arts.
Following his graduation in educational sciences in 1371, Fakhreddin Mokhbari married in 1364, completed his master's degree in art at the University of Derby in the United Kingdom, and established his own painting school to instruct students in various realistic techniques.They established Surreal and Modern, and under their direction, their students annually obtain associate degrees and diplomas.
The combination of dreamy spaces and pristine and natural landscapes, as well as the coexistence of man and nature, are among the most important features of Fakhreddin Mokhbari's landscape paintings. He painted these scenes under the influence of Shishkin's works and was inspired by his style.
The way that painters like Rembrandt and Rubens painted portraits and conveyed emotion on their subjects' features served as an inspiration to him. This artist has had several domestic and international exhibits featuring his works. The ART Renewal Center named him one of the top 100 painters in the world for the years 2012–2013–2020.
Fakhruddin Mokhbari attempts to seize the chance to filter reality via his artistic sensibilities and thoughts while also accurately drawing the people, the surroundings, and the space. The majority of journalistic works include female protagonists that embody the essence and vigor of both nature and life itself. Through his surrealist paintings, Master Mokhbari has attempted to capture the societal challenges and worries of the modern world.
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