Ahad Hosseini


Ahad Hosseini is an Iranian Azerbaijani sculptor and painter.
He was born in 1944 in Tabriz, East Azerbaijan Province, northwest Iran. During his 2-year military service, he worked as teacher-soldier in a small mountain village located on the Caspian coast. A sense of loneliness in this remote village drove him to find his talent in sculpture. His first works of sculpture were of Einstein, Bertrand Russell, Beethoven, and Dr. Albert Schweitzer. He then worked for a short period in Parviz Tanavoli's atelier in Tehran.
In 1972, he studied art in Italy as a student at the Accademia di Belle Arti of Florence. After returning to Tabriz, he concentrated upon his work and created his 12 sculptures called "Misery Around the World" which he presented them to the Azerbaijan Museum. The works are made of bronze and consists of different depictions of human misery.
Between 1980 and 1982, Hosseini taught sculpture in Tabriz and edited a book entitled "What is Art?". He then lived in Turkey and made some sculptures for Istanbul University. His work "" is in the Istanbul University Faculty of Political Sciences.
From 1984 until 1990, Hosseini studied and worked at the in Paris. There he explored "form". In 1993 he made about 60 masks for a French TV show.
Hoseini's works have been displayed at many French art fairs: