Louay Kayali

Louay Kayali (Arabic: لؤي كيالي), (20 January 1934 – 26 January 1978) was a Syrian modern artist.

Louay Kayali
لؤي كيالي
Born(1934-01-20)January 20, 1934
DiedJanuary 26, 1978(1978-01-26) (aged 44)
NationalitySyrian
EducationAccademia di Belle Arti di Firenze
Known forPainting, Drawing
MovementModern

Biography

Kayali was born in Aleppo, Syria in 1934 and studied art in the Accademia di Belle Arti after having studied at the Al-Tajhiz School where his work was first exhibited in 1952.[1][2] He met Syrian artist Wahbi al-Hariri there and the two would share a friendship for the rest of Kayali's life. Al-Hariri would become his mentor as he was for artist Fateh Moudarres that Hariri introduced to Kayali in 1955. Moudarress and Kayali would together represent Syrian modern art at the Venice Biennial Fair.[3] He suffered from depression and died in 1978[4] from burns incurred from his bed catching fire, reportedly from a cigarette.[5][6]

Return to Syria

Wahbi al-Hariri, front center, and Louay Kayali, right, facing; Aleppo, Syria, 1964.

He graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Rome in 1961 and returned to Syria where he started his career as a fine arts professor at Damascus University where Fateh Moudarres also taught.[7] That same year, the International Modern Art Hall of Damascus hosted his exhibit of 28 oil paintings on canvas and 30 sketches.[8][9]

Posthumous exchanges

In 2009, Bonham's Auction House sold one of Kayali's paintings for $132,000.00.[10]

In 2008, Christie's auctioned off several of his paintings:[11]

  • Portrait of a Lady, $34,600.00
  • Motherhood, $157,000.00
  • The Laundrette, $43,000.00

On April 16, 2013, Christie's sold two of his paintings as part of the Modern and Contemporary Arab, Iranian and Turkish Art Part I auction (Sale 8061) in Dubai [12]

  • Boy Reading, (Lot 7), $135,750.00
  • Big Boy with Watering Can, (Lot 9), $159,750.00

On October 25, 2011, Christie's Dubai sold his work titled "Fisherman in Arwad" for $194,500 which is the highest auction sale price as of March 16, 2016

Tribute

In 2019, he was featured as a Google Doodle on what would have been his 85th birthday.[13]

gollark: Which is a lot harder to implement than to say, but eh.
gollark: I think it would make more sense to just make it try and minimize cost (in the sense of resource expenditure or something) to do/make whatever the player sets.
gollark: Um, anyway, I'll go fill it out, but I think this is kind of approaching it from the wrong angle.
gollark: Er, robots. Not turtles. Though turtles are much easier to deal with, actually, for that.
gollark: Oh, you know what would be cool and is... kind of related to this? Self-replicating turtles!

See also

References

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