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"Qajar Persia" In The Eyes Of Italian Photographer Hits Bookstores

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  • "Qajar Persia" In The Eyes Of Italian Photographer Hits Bookstores

    "QAJAR PERSIA" IN THE EYES OF ITALIAN PHOTOGRAPHER HITS BOOKSTORES

    http://tehrantimes.com/arts-and-culture/95116-qajar-persia-in-the-eyes-of-italian-photographer-hits-bookstores
    04 February 2012 15:42

    A cover of the Persian version of "Qajar Persia" TEHRAN -- Pictures
    taken by the Italian photographer Luigi Montabone have recently been
    published in a book named "The Qajar Persia".

    Compiled by Mojgan Tariqati, the bilingual book was edited by Iraj
    Afshar. Shahriar Adl and Mohammad Sattari have written a preface for
    the book released by Mirdashti Publications.

    The book contains 71 photos taken by Montabone. The photos are
    collected from three albums; two of them are now in Tehran's Golestan
    Palace and another is kept in Biblioteca Marciana in Venice, Tariqati
    mentioned in book's prelude.

    She mentioned that Montabone has added or removed photos from albums.

    For example, he removed four photos of ladies, three of them were
    Italians and one of them was Armenian lady from Tbilisi, from the
    albums dedicated to the Golestan Palace.

    Instead, the albums contain photos featuring urban landscapes,
    people's social culture, historical sites, people's costumes, jobs
    as well as people from different social classes.

    Arguably, Luigi Montabone (? - 1877) might be called the first and only
    Italian photographer in nineteenth century in Iran. He was commissioned
    to join an Italian delegation to Persia to take pictures of anything
    that could be of interest to the members of this delegation.

    The mission, consisting of sixteen persons, mostly diplomats and
    scholars, left Geneva in 1862 for Constantinople, and from there
    travelled via Tbilisi, Yerevan, Tabriz, and Qazvin to Tehran. The
    delegation aimed to establish diplomatic relations and to promote
    commercial affairs.

    Montabone not only took portraits of all sorts of people, but also took
    photographs of a variety of architectural structures, landscapes and
    city views. He climbed buildings or hills to find beautiful panoramas
    or just the right angle to take his photographs.

    He also experimented with coloring his photographs which was and still
    is a unique aspect within nineteenth century photography in Persia.


    From: Baghdasarian
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