Yehia Dessouki

Yehia Dessouki
Born (1978-03-13) 13 March 1978
Cairo, Egypt
Nationality Egyptian
Known for Painting

Yehia Dessouki (Arabic: يحيى دسوقى; born 13 March 1978) is an Egyptian painter and visual artist making contemporary art using diverse kinds of media both traditional and digital. He is also an architect, who graduated from the faculty of fine-arts, architecture department, of Helwan University. He has participated in many group exhibitions showing several art works featuring different themes, such as: Architecture of Old Islamic Cairo - Still Life - Lanterns of Ramadan Fawanees - Circus, and later on he made his first solo exhibition about “Joy of Roses” including soft pastel sketches and also oil paintings.

Digital painting of artist Yehia Dessouki on cover of newspaper Akhbar Al-Adab

Artist Yehia Dessouki has a distinguished style,[1] remarkable for his use of vivid and rich colorful palettes in most of his art-works.[2]

Being raised among an artistic family was an early dominant influence on his art life. His father is the famous Batik artist Ali Dessouki and his mother was an art critic and lawyer. More influence came along with his summer study trip to Italy (Società Dante Alighieri), giving him a golden chance to visit art museums in Rome, Milan, Florence and Pisa and most importantly, visiting Venice Biennial of Plastic Arts.

Thanks to his passion for digital graphics, he made some diverse experimental digital art works specially in digital painting showing an innovative art theme which mixes between Marionettes of theater and Arabic calligraphy.One of those digital-paintings was the first digital painting art work ever to be published on the cover of a formal Egyptian newspaper Akhbar Al-Adab, which is a famous weekly Egyptian newspaper read by Egyptian cultural elite.

Biography

Exhibitions

Awards

Collections

Important works of art in the life of the artist

“Ancient Islamic Cairo” Ink drawings
“Still-life” oil painting
“Joy of Roses” soft-pastel
“Marionettes of Theater & Arabic Calligraphy” Digital Painting

See also

Notes

  1. Ezz El Din Naguib 2009, p. 5.
  2. Rania El Damasy 2009, p 12.

References

Foundations
Individuals 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.