Age, Biography and Wiki

Y.Z. Kami was born on 1956 in Iran. Discover Y.Z. Kami's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 67 years old?

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Age 67 years old
Zodiac Sign
Born 1956
Birthday 1956
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Nationality Iran

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1956. He is a member of famous with the age 67 years old group.

Y.Z. Kami Height, Weight & Measurements

At 67 years old, Y.Z. Kami height not available right now. We will update Y.Z. Kami's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

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Y.Z. Kami Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Y.Z. Kami worth at the age of 67 years old? Y.Z. Kami’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from Iran. We have estimated Y.Z. Kami's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
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Timeline

2016

In 2016–17 the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Los Angeles, held a solo exhibition of Kami's work entitled "Endless Prayers." In 2022-2023 The Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y León (MUSAC) held a solo exhibition of Kami's work entitled "De forma silenciosa/In a Silent Way."

2015

Kami is recognized for using oil paint to achieve a dry, matte surface, similar to those of frescoes and sacred wall paintings in Byzantine and early Renaissance art. To develop this technique he spent years experimenting with oils, dry pigments, and dust. As artist/educator Grace Adam explained in The Art Channel's segment on Kami's 2015 exhibition at Gagosian Britannia Street, London, "[Kami] primes the canvas in gesso, then adds a bit of stone dust and this amazing terra cotta color - then lay[s] these beautiful colors over the top of it."

2014

The Domes have been featured in numerous solo exhibitions, including "Y.Z. Kami: Paintings" (Gagosian New York in 2014, and Gagosian London in 2015), "Endless Prayers" (Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 2016–17), as well as at Gagosian Paris in 2018. As Robert Storr writes on the Dome paintings, "Composed of nested concentric rings of brick-like lozenges that evoke the domes and cupolas of churches, mosques, and temples, these panels are dilating and contracting mandalas for the contemplation of unfettered minds." Through these abstract paintings, Kami continues to explore that which might not be discernible or visible to human eyes.

2013

In recent large-scale portraits, Kami emphasizes the process behind the paintings, at times emphasizing or inventing individual features, as in Man with Violet Eyes (2013–14). He has also shifted from representing his subjects with soft, blurred gazes, to showing them with eyes closed, heightening their introspective, emotional distance. As Steven Henry Madoff has written about these works, "We climb across the knowable into a state of expectation and suspension in which we open ourselves to the possibility of an immaterial presence, a link to mere Being." In this way, the paintings' focal points are not the eyes, as is the case in traditional portraits, but rather the entire face, emanating as a single, enveloping presence. "When you go through the process of looking at a face and you meditate on it with pigments and brushes in hand," Kami says "it is like living with the face. In a way, it becomes part of you."

2008

The Endless Prayer works are mixed-media collages on paper, inspired by architectural designs. These works—made by gluing minute brick-shaped cutouts from Persian, Arabic, Aramaic, and Hebrew texts into circles—recall the ritual of prayer and the mosaics of sacred architecture, and the brick patterns of domes in particular. Though Kami had been producing Endless Prayer works on paper for a decade prior, he exhibited them for the first time at Parasol Unit Foundation for Contemporary Art in London, John Berggruen Gallery, Gagosian, and the Sackler Gallery, Smithsonain Institution, in 2008.

2007

As a child, Kami traveled frequently with his family. His experiences viewing ancient architectural structures and the vast, dry desert left a significant impression on him, which he later carried out into his artwork. During his student years in Paris, Kami was profoundly interested in Lévinas's ideas regarding the human face. He considered these ideas in relation to early Egyptian Fayum mummy portraits, which he first saw at the Louvre. He has recounted that he was impressed by their "neutral expressions ... their big eyes and their otherworldliness." Other influences include 13th- and 14th-century Persian poetry, especially the writings of the Sufi poet Rumi. Konya (2007), for instance, includes several photographs from Rumi's mausoleum in Konya, where he lived and died.

2005

Y.Z. Kami created Rumi, the Book of Shams e Tabrizi (In Memory of Mahin Tajadod) for the 9th International Istanbul Biennial in 2005. He cut blocks from gray soapstone, then, in lithographic ink, he stamped them with the original Persian verses of a poem by Rumi. The poem is a rhythmic, repetitive incantation: "Come to me, come to me my beloved, my beloved/ Enter, enter into my work, into my work!" The sculpture consists of twelve circles made up of individual stone blocks, and can be arranged in two different ways: either in concentric circles around an area of white salt referring to a white light; or as separate circles, each keeping its original diameter from the concentric arrangement, but installed as individual rings.

2004

Though Kami's portraits are known for their subtle, meditative qualities, the artist gained particular attention for his more political work, such as In Jerusalem (2004–05), which was included in "Think With the Senses, Feel With the Mind," curated by Robert Storr at the 52nd Biennale di Venezia in Italy. The work depicts five prominent religious leaders – a Catholic cardinal, an Eastern Orthodox bishop, Sephardic and Ashkenazi rabbis, and a Sunni imam – who came together in 2005 in fierce opposition to a gay pride march to be held in Jerusalem. Kami extracted the figures from a photograph featured on the front page of the New York Times. In Storr's essay "Every Time I Feel the Spirit...", he credits Kami "with gentle audacity for accepting the challenge of limning credible contemporary images of prayer—including several of clasped hands raised in adoration and/or entreaty—and, so, under current art world conditions, for the exceptional courage of his convictions."

2003

Kami's work has been collected and exhibited by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.; Parasol Unit Foundation for Contemporary Art, London, and many other institutions worldwide. Solo museum exhibitions have been presented at the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York (2003); Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. (2008); Parasol Unit Foundation for Contemporary Art, London (2008); and National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens (2009–10). His work was included in the 52nd Venice Biennale (2007, curated by Robert Storr).

2000

The Endless Prayer works led to the Dome paintings, in which, instead of text, Kami uses color and shape to refer to mosaics and architecture, applying brick-like dabs of paint in concentric rings, leaving the center either dark or light. Ongoing since the mid-2000s, Kami's Domes have been produced in blue, black, white, and gold. Paul Richard of The Washington Post writes of this series: "Peering at that picture is like standing with your face upright underneath a punctured dome, say, the Pantheon's in Rome, or that of some Turkish mosque, looking through the oculus, which interrupts the masonry high above your head and lets you see, beyond, the brightness of the sky." The Domes offer an abstract counterpoint to Kami's portraits, bringing ideas as diverse as architecture, light, prayer, meditation, and minimalism into a single act of repetition. When asked about the Dome paintings in relation to his other work Kami states, "The connection is through light. There is an experience of light in the portraits, as if the sitter is coming out of light or going into light. And in the White Domes, it's also very much about that experience of light."

1990

In the 1990s, Kami painted single portraits of men and women, which scholars and critics have discussed through a lens of mourning and mortality. Untitled (1997), a single work composed of sixteen portraits, is held in the collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. The portraits, painted from photographs, recall both traditional Byzantine and Fayum portraits, as well as newspaper photographs. In his review of "Invitational Exhibition"—a group show at the American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York, in 2000—Ken Johnson wrote in the New York Times: "[T]he show's most emotionally moving work is Y. Z. Kami's big wall of portraits: blurred, warmly muted, photo-based images of 16 people exude a haunting, funereal mood. Tapping into a tradition that goes back to Roman times, Mr. Kami has produced a work that feels soberingly right for this moment in history."

1987

In addition to the portraits and Domes, Kami began creating paintings of hands in 1987. While he initially depicted individual hands, since 2012 the hands in Kami's paintings are typically posed in a manner associated with prayer, and are rendered with the same nuance and concentration as the portraits. Kami explains how meditation is present in the portraits, light is present in the domes, and faith is present in the hands. He does not limit the association of faith to one religion. The bare hands engaged in prayer are a universal image for faith and contemplation of the unknown.

1984

After living in Paris for over a decade, Kami moved to New York in 1984, where he continues to live and work.

1980

Reflecting on the beginning stages of his painting, Kami explains how his foundational years merged with his interest in American art of the 1980s: "My mother was a portrait painter, so I have been painting portraits since I was a child. For many years I painted with a sitter in front of me: I would make a drawing first with pencil or charcoal on canvas and then paint with oil. Years later, in the mid-1980s, when I moved to America, I encountered Andy Warhol's very large portrait of Mao at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Chuck Close's large portraits, as well as Alex Katz and other American artists. And gradually I began to change the size of the heads in my paintings. Prior to that, my experiences with large portraits focused mainly on frescoes and mosaics in the churches of Europe."

During the 1980s Kami moved away from painting directly from life to working from sketches and photographs of each sitter. These paintings, larger than the previous portraits, rely on Kami's memory of the subjects and therefore depict the lasting impression of the encounter rather than the moment of the encounter itself. He made large-scale portraits that encourage the viewer to closely observe the human face Kami notes, "as the size of the paintings grew larger, the images became a little blurred, and gradually more and more out of focus. The blurrier they became, the more abstract the experience was for the viewer when approaching the work." Kami's portraits, based on his own photographs of family, friends, and strangers, present ordinary, introspective subjects, yet each face acts as a threshold between the sitter's impenetrable inner thoughts and the viewer's perception. In 1989, Kami traveled to Iran for the first time after many years and came across a photograph of himself taken when he was eleven. This photograph eventually became a point of reference in his work, inspiring a series of self-portrait variations. Versions of Self Portrait as a Child have since been acquired by private collectors and one work from the series, showing the portrait with a group of three women sitting at a table, is included in the permanent collection of the Guggenheim Museum.

1956

Y.Z. Kami (born Kamran Youssefzadeh, 1956) is an Iranian-American artist based in New York City.

Y.Z. Kami was born in Tehran, Iran in 1956. His first encounters with art came at an early age, as he spent time with his mother, also a portrait painter, in her studio in their family home. After high school Kami attended the University of California, Berkeley, in 1975, then received his B.A. and M.A. from the Université Paris-Sorbonne in Paris, France, where he studied from 1976 to 1981. While in Paris he attended the lectures of Claude Lévi-Strauss, Roland Barthes, Henry Corbin, and Emmanuel Lévinas. He then continued his education at the Conservatoire Libre du Cinema Français in Paris in 1982. However, his study of film led him to realize that he preferred a more solitary practice, and he returned to painting.