Mir Ali Tabrizi: Difference between revisions

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'''Mir Ali Tabrizi''' ({{lang-fa|میرعلی تبریزی}}) also known as '''Mir Ali Heravi'''({{lang-fa|میرعلی هروی}}) (b. in [[Herat]] Afghanistan and d. in Tabriz in modern [[Iran]]) is distinguished Persian<ref>S. Brent Plate, "Religion, art, and visual culture: a cross-cultural reader",Palgrave Macmillan, 2002. pg 93:"precision of tradition still allows for creativity, and there is a telling story of a famous Persian calligrapher, Mir Ali Tabrizi (died c. 1420 CEl,"</ref>. The precision of tradition still allows for creativity, and there is a telling story of a famous Persian calligrapher, Mir Ali Tabrizi (died c. 1420 CEl) [[calligraphy|calligrapher]] in the 14th century, to whom the invention of [[Nasta'liq]] calligraphy style is attributed.
'''Mir Ali Tabrizi''' ({{lang-fa|میرعلی تبریزی}}) also known as '''Mir Ali Heravi'''({{lang-fa|میرعلی هروی}}) (b. in [[Herat]] Afghanistan and d. in Tabriz in modern [[Iran]]) is a distinguished Persian calligrapher.<ref>S. Brent Plate, "Religion, art, and visual culture: a cross-cultural reader",Palgrave Macmillan, 2002. pg 93:"precision of tradition still allows for creativity, and there is a telling story of a famous Persian calligrapher, Mir Ali Tabrizi (died c. 1420 CEl,"</ref> The precision of tradition still allows for creativity, and there is a telling story of a famous Persian calligrapher, Mir Ali Tabrizi (died c. 1420 CEl) [[calligraphy|calligrapher]] in the 14th century, to whom the invention of [[Nasta'liq]] calligraphy style is attributed.


He was born in [[Herat]] (present-day [[Afghanistan]]) and lived in 14th and 15th century. His full name is "Mir-Ali Heravi Tabrizi" and he is known as father of [[Nasta'liq]], the most popular style of [[Persian calligraphy]]. He was thus titled "Qodwat al-Kottab" (literarily 'the chief of the scribes'). He invented this beautiful calligraphy style by means of combining two older styles together (Naskh and Taliq). Historians have not been able to unveil details of Mir Ali's life yet. It is known that he lived in [[Tabriz]] and was a poet as well as an adept calligrapher (see [[Dehkhoda Dictionary|Dehkhoda dictionary]]). He died in 850th of [[Islamic calendar|Hijra]] (1446-7).
He was born in [[Herat]] (present-day [[Afghanistan]]) and lived in 14th and 15th century. His full name is "Mir-Ali Heravi Tabrizi" and he is known as father of [[Nasta'liq]], the most popular style of [[Persian calligraphy]]. He was thus titled "Qodwat al-Kottab" (literarily 'the chief of the scribes'). He invented this beautiful calligraphy style by means of combining two older styles together (Naskh and Taliq). Historians have not been able to unveil details of Mir Ali's life yet. It is known that he lived in [[Tabriz]] and was a poet as well as an adept calligrapher (see [[Dehkhoda Dictionary|Dehkhoda dictionary]]). He died in 850th of [[Islamic calendar|Hijra]] (1446-7).

Revision as of 01:00, 12 January 2012

Mir Ali Tabrizi (Persian: میرعلی تبریزی) also known as Mir Ali Heravi(Persian: میرعلی هروی) (b. in Herat Afghanistan and d. in Tabriz in modern Iran) is a distinguished Persian calligrapher.[1] The precision of tradition still allows for creativity, and there is a telling story of a famous Persian calligrapher, Mir Ali Tabrizi (died c. 1420 CEl) calligrapher in the 14th century, to whom the invention of Nasta'liq calligraphy style is attributed.

He was born in Herat (present-day Afghanistan) and lived in 14th and 15th century. His full name is "Mir-Ali Heravi Tabrizi" and he is known as father of Nasta'liq, the most popular style of Persian calligraphy. He was thus titled "Qodwat al-Kottab" (literarily 'the chief of the scribes'). He invented this beautiful calligraphy style by means of combining two older styles together (Naskh and Taliq). Historians have not been able to unveil details of Mir Ali's life yet. It is known that he lived in Tabriz and was a poet as well as an adept calligrapher (see Dehkhoda dictionary). He died in 850th of Hijra (1446-7).

Nasta'liq, is a light and elegant cursive script as other types of Islamic calligraphy. In contrast to other Islamic scripts, the Nasta'liq has characters that appear to swing from the upper right to the lower left of each word as if suspended by an imaginary line. It featured elongated horizontal strokes and exaggerated rounded forms with no serifs. The diacritical marks were casually placed, and the lines were flowing rather than straight. There is a popular myth that Mir Ali Mirza Jafar Tabrizi, another well-known Persian calligrapher, was Mir Ali's pupil. Later, Mirza Jafar's students followed Mir Ali's style in Herat, where his scripts were frequently copied and highly praised.

Notes

  1. ^ S. Brent Plate, "Religion, art, and visual culture: a cross-cultural reader",Palgrave Macmillan, 2002. pg 93:"precision of tradition still allows for creativity, and there is a telling story of a famous Persian calligrapher, Mir Ali Tabrizi (died c. 1420 CEl,"

External links