Hossein Zenderoudi
Charles Hossein Zenderoudi is an Iranian painter, calligrapher and sculptor, known as a pioneer of Iranian [modern art] and as one of the earliest artists to incorporate Persian calligraphy elements into his artwork. He is a pioneer of the Saqqakhaneh School of Art, a genre of neo-traditional modern art founded in Iran that is rooted in the history of Persian coffee-house paintings and Persian Shia visual elements. He lives in Paris and New York.
Biography
Hossein Zenderoudi was born in Tehran, Iran, on March 11, 1937.Zenderoudi attended the Tehran College of Decorative Arts in the 1950s to study painting and calligraphy under the mentorship of Parviz Tanavoli and Marcos Grigorian. He was active in the arts community in Iran, through his membership of art groups between 1958 and 1960, alongside Parviz Tanavoli, he became one of the key figures of the Saqqakhaneh School of Art, which explored the use of Persian Shia popular visual elements and calligraphy in art. He influenced generations of artists internationally.
After winning an award at the 2nd annual Tehran Painting Biennial in 1960, he moved in 1961 to Paris, France and later became a French national.
Zenderoudi’s granddaughter is the French singer-songwriter, Barbara Pravi, who represented France at the Eurovision Song Contest 2021, finishing 2nd place.
Work
Collections
Hossein Zenderoudi's artwork held in permanent museum collections:- K+L+32+H+4. Mon père et moi , mixed-media on board, The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York City, New York
- Miuz Skfe, oil on canvas, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris. France
- The Hand, mixed-media collage, Grey Art Gallery at New York University, New York City, New York
- Yee-Kga-Bas, painting on canvas, musée Bertrand, Châteauroux, France.
- Who is this Hossein the world is crazy about?, linocut print on linen, British Museum, London, United Kingdom, acquired by the museum in 2011
Awards
- 1958 – Prize at the Paris Biennial
- 1964 – Cagnes-sur-Mer prize
- 1959 – Award of the Iran-America Society, Tehran
- 1961 – Laureate of the Paris Biennial, France
- 1962 – Laureate of the Venice Biennale, Italy