Hassan Massoudy's calligraphies are arranged to loosely follow the
seasons, beginning and ending with autumn: sombre, wintry hues at one
end, brilliant tones full of vibrant reds at the other.--Venetia Porter
Hassan Massoudy's elegant calligraphy depicts the four seasons of the
garden. From the icy palettes of winter and the fading hues of autumn to
delicate spring growth and the dazzling sunshine and blooms of summer,
he captures in calligraphy what countless poets have wrought with words.
Massoudy draws his seasonal inspirations from writers and artists,
including Kahlil Gibran, Henri Matisse, Lao Tzu, William Blake, and
Victor Hugo, as well as from Hungarian, Spanish, Turkish, and Japanese
proverbs.
Hassan Massoudy was born in Najaf, Iraq. He moved to France in 1969,
where he studied at L'École des Beaux-Arts. His work has been exhibited
throughout Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East, and is in the
permanent collections of the British Museum and the Jordan National
Gallery of Fine Arts, among others. Nineteen books of his calligraphy
have been published in France, along with his autobiography, Si loin de
l'Euphrate: Une jeunesse d'artiste en Irak.