Iran Semnan Garden & Museum باغ موزه سمنان ايران
March 28, 2016 (Persian calendar 1395/1/9)
Semnan province (استان سمنان)
Semnan city (شهر سمنان)
Iran Semnan Garden & Museum
باغ موزه سمنان ايران
Iran's paradise garden
(28 Sep 2012)
AP Television
Shiraz, Southern Iran, May 19th 2012
1. Wide of mansion in the middle of Eram Garden in Shiraz
2. Shift focus of flower to water flowing out into stream
3. Tilt-down palm tree and the house
4. Tilt-up pool to house
5. Pan of house exterior and balcony
6. Mid of tile painting depicting an Iranian couple
7. Mid of Hamid Reza Sattari walking past pool
8. Pan from face to house
9. SOUNDBITE (Farsi) Hamid Reza Sattari, director of Eram Botanical Garden:
This is Eram garden in Shiraz, which is around 900 years old. It has been noted for its almost intact structure in terms of architecture, and has been registered by UNESCO as a typical model of Iranian gardens.
10. Close-up of flowers with water flowing in background
11. Pan of True Lavender bushes
12. Close-up of sign reading True lavender
13. SOUNDBITE (Farsi) Hamid Reza Sattari, director of Eram Botanical Garden:
Different species of plants have been gathered from around the world and are kept here. We keep more than 400 living species of plants here.
14. Tilt-up tree
15. Close-up of flower
16. Mid of flowers
17. Close-up of sign reading Blessed thistle
18. Tilt-down tree
19. Mid of branches swaying in the wind
20. Mid of tree's shade on the ground
21. Wide of people walking in garden
22. Low angle of garden
23. Tilt down tall tree
24. Low-angle pan of trees against sky
25. SOUNDBITE (Turkish) Jamal Shikar, Turkish tourist:
Long before we came to Iranian gardens, we'd grown up with its legends, and legends whet your appetite for realities and living between legends and realities I realised that flowers, waters, trees and palaces which were long described in songs existed in Eram garden.
26. Mid of couple walking in garden
27. Mid of garden
28. Rear shot of couple talking in garden
29. Pan of garden
30. Shift focus from flowers to young people posing for picture
31. Wide of garden and young people
32. SOUNDBITE (Farsi) Aynaz Qashgai, Soroudeh Keyhan, local vistors:
I think it looks like paradise. There are various types of plant species that have made this garden very special and distinguished among Iranian gardens. There are many beautiful gardens in Iran. The house in the middle of the garden is also very beautiful.
33. Tilt down leaves to small lake
34. Mid of lake
35. Mid of two young girls sitting and chatting by lake
36. Various of garden
37. Pull focus of young couple taking pictures
38. Mid of girls sitting by stream
LEADIN
The Iranians' love of constructing gardens has its roots in the ancient Zoroastrianism tradition, which emphasises the sacredness of water and art.
The country's most famous example is the Eram Botanical Garden in Shiraz.
STORYLINE:
Built during the Saljuq dynasty (A.D.1038-1194) in the city of Shiraz, the 11-hectare Eram Garden is the most well known among the nine UNESCO-registered gardens of Iran.
The beautiful three-story building in the centre of the garden is not as old as the garden itself.
It was designed by the then famous architect named Haj Mohammad Hassan during the reign of Naser al-Din Shah Qajar, (1848-96). It has been through several renovations since its construction and is currently being renovated again and will open as a museum of Iranian art next year.
The garden is run by the Shiraz Medical University. Hamid Reza Sattari is the director.
He says: This is Eram garden in Shiraz, which is around 900 years old. It has been noted for its almost intact structure in terms of architecture, and has been registered by UNESCO as a typical model of Iranian gardens.
Eram garden is no exception and provides an exceptional rendezvous for peoples from all walks of life.
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Art Museum Garden, Hesabi Street, Tajrish, Shemiran, Tehran
Art Museum Garden, Hesabi Street, Tajrish, Shemiran, Tehran
Teheran - Muzeum Narodowe Iranu - National Museum of Iran - موزهٔ ملی ایران
Teheran - Muzeum Narodowe Iranu - National Museum of Iran - موزهٔ ملی ایران
Iran 2nd Plants & Garden exhibition, Goft-e Goo park دومين نمايشگاه گل و گياه بوستان گفتگو ايران
November 21, 2017 (Persian calendar 1396/8/30)
Tehran province (استان تهران)
Tehran city (شهر تهران)
Goft-e Goo park (بوستان گفتگو) Geo coordinate
35.7355132N, 51.3825329E
Iran 2nd Plants & Garden exhibition, Goft-e Goo park
دومين نمايشگاه گل و گياه بوستان گفتگو ايران
Iran ancient Glassware & Ceramic Museum (Abgineh) موزه آبگينه ايران
February 20, 2016 (Persian calendar 1394/12/1)
Tehran province (استان تهران)
Tehran city (شهر تهران)
Building of Museum was the residence and office of Ahmad Qavam احمد قوام until 1951. Afterwards, the Egyptian Embassy in Tehran took over the building and finally handed it over to the Iranian Commercial Bank.
From 1976, a group of Iranian and Austrian architects refurbished the building and converted it into a museum which was opened on 1989. Abguineh museum موزه آبگينه comprises several halls and workshops and a library. Art works and handicrafts exhibited in this museum include three collections of porcelains, glassworks and crystals.
Porcelains
The magnificent collection of porcelains exhibits a thorough history of ceramics and porcelains made in Iran from the dawn of history until today. It also provides a bulk of information about the evolution of porcelain and its production technique. Some of these porcelains enjoy paintings on the basis of proverbs and old mythical and folk tales.
Glass works
Glass works that are exhibited in this museum start from the ones made in the first and second millennium BC and extend up to modern ones. In this section the glass works production technique including the sand molds, cutting and pressing equipment are introduced.
Crystals
On the ground floor hall of the museum, crystal and flint glass samples of 18th and 19th centuries are exhibited. All these samples are mostly cut and made in Europe.
Specialized Library On the northwestern courtyard of the museum, the newly constructed building of the library is visible. This specialized library contains almost 4,000 books on archeology and the history of art.
Persian Garden (2005) - Official Trailer
Persian Garden, gives a behind-the-scenes look at the largest and most ambitious art exhibition in Iran since the 1979 Islamic revolution. Curator Faryar Javaherian invited over thirty renowned Iranian artists to respond to a theme that is paramount to Iranian history and culture: the Persian garden. Ancient Wisdom, New Vision, which opened at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art in September 2004, attracted record crowds. The exhibition included painting, architecture, photography, video art, installations, conceptual art, music, performance, and environmental art.
Director Bahman Kiarostami followed the artists—among them his father, Abbas Kiarostami, as well as Parviz Tanavoli, Farideh Lashai, Farshid Mesghali, and Dariush Mehrjui—from the inception of their artwork to its delivery to the museum. The film includes footage of artists at work and presents interviews in which they speak candidly about their creative process and talk about what the Persian Garden represents to them, about the role that these gardens have played in their lives. Many of their works challenged traditional notions of the Persian Garden, which sparked a lively dialogue in the press and in the international artistic community.
Director: Bahman Kiarostami
Producer: Marjaneh Moghimi
Iran / 2004
Bagh e Ferdows (Ferdows Garden) & Film Museum of Iran, Tajrish in Shemiran, Tehran
Bagh e Ferdows (Ferdows Garden) & Film Museum of Iran, Tajrish, Shemiran, Tehran
Walking to Iranian art museum | پیادهروی تا باغ موزه هنر ایران
MirOmid Razavi | Digital Producer | Vlogger | Youtuber | Tehran, Iran
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سلام، میرامید هستم از تهران به ساختن ولاگ علاقهمندم (ولاگر و یوتیوبر ایرانی) امیدوارم از ویدئوهایی که میسازم لذت ببرید برای ارتباط با من میتونید از صفحه اینستاگرام و توییترم استفاده کنید که آخر همه ویدئوهام میتونید ببینید. خیلی خوشحال میشم اگه به کانالم سابسکرایب بشید و اگه از ویدئوهام خوشتون اومده لایک کنید.
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where you can find me | کجاها میتونید منو پیدا کنید
Instagram - اینستاگرام :
Twitter - توییتر :
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Iran Tehran Abgineh Museum موزه آبگينه و سفالينه تهران ايران
December 29, 2014 (Persian calendar 1393/10/8)
Tehran city (شهر تهران)
The Abgineh آبگينه museum is located in south of Tehran. The structure is situated in a garden with a span of 7,000 square meters. In 1920, the building was the residence and the working office of “Ahmad Qavam احمد قوام”, the minister of Ahmad Shah Qajar احمد شاه قاجار.
The collection of art works is on display in six halls and two entrance halls in separate sections depicting different historical eras and subjects. The art works and the handicrafts exhibited here include collections of glass works, crystals, clay works and porcelains.
I Was Here - Iran | Art in Iran ????????
Walls across the different towns of Iran are decorated with verses and couplets from the legendary Shams Tabrizi to Divan of Hafez and even Rumi's poems. Art in Iran takes different forms in different places, being not only restricted to gallery and museums, but also facades of building, metro subways and alleyways.
#IWasHere #Iran #PersianArt
Background score and Soundbank by Mim Rasouli
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Golnaz Olya's First Exhibition in Iranian Art Centre - Tehran, IRAN 2011
Iran Carpet Museum
The Iran Carpet Museum is housed in a fine building located in the Northwest corner of Laleh Park in central Tehran. The exterior facade of the building is very beautiful, with an unusual architecture in the shape of a carpet weaving device.
Inside IRAN: Negarestan Garden in Tehran [Nowruz 98] باغ موزه نگارستان
This is Negarestan Garden and Museum.
** More info on Negarestan Garden and Museum:
I really liked the Cafe/ Restaurant, the garden and the museum and I can absolutely recommend this place if you are visiting Tehran. There are also many other attractions nearby this place!
I hope you like this video! Please don't forget to LIKE, SHARE and SUBSCRIBE! Thanks :-)
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#Iran #Tehran #Negarestan #Persian #Iranian #Garden
Tehran 27: The Negarestan Garden & Cafe Tehroon
Revival of artistic memories of the city and cultural and historical places has taken a satisfactory momentum in recent years. In pursuance of this policy the Negarestan Garden, a Qajar era monument in Baharestan Square of Tehran, has been converted into a museum to display works of Qajar era painter Mohammad Qaffari (1847-1940), known as Kamal-ol Molk, and his students.
According to Shahrnevesht, Negarestan Garden in the age of Qajar Dynasty had been turned into a school for fine industries and was effective in revival and promulgation of arts such as painting, sculpturing, etc.
The garden has been turned to the museum of Kamal-ol Molk school by Tehran’s Municipality Beautification Organization with the cooperation of Tehran University.
In this museum which surveys the school of Kamal-ol Molk, paintings of the master together with the works of two generations of his students have been put on display. The museum also demonstrates documents relating to the school for fine industries.
Mohammad Ghaffari, better known as Kamal-ol Molk, born in Kashan in 1847, to a family greatly attached to art, was undoubtedly one of the most eminent artists in Iran.
Dubbed as the Michelangelo of Persia, his uncle, Mirza AbolHassan Khan Ghaffari, known as Sanee-ol Molk, a 19th century celebrated painter, was unrivalled in watercolor portraits. His father, Mirza Bozorg Ghaffari Kashani, was the founder of Iran's painting school and a famous artist as well.
His brother, AbuTorab Ghaffari, was also a distinguished painter of his time. Mohammad developed an interest in calligraphy and painting at a young age.
In his childhood eagerness, he drew charcoal sketches on the walls of his room. Some of the sketches he drew in that very house may amazingly, still be visible.
The museum showcases 120 works created by renowned Iranian artist Kamal-ol Molk and a number of his students who graduated from Tehran School of Fine Arts. School of Fine Arts was established by Kamal-ol Molk back in 1911.
It was founded with the aim of teaching and developing artistic fields including painting, carpet weaving, carving and…
Several years after the foundation of the school, Abolhassan Sediqi set up sculpture department at the school. After the death of Kamal-ol Molk, the school was divided into two schools of Kamal-ol Molk school of arts and school of traditional arts.
At the corner of Negarestan Garden there is a beautiful café named café Tehroon which you can't miss after visiting the museum.
It has a very pleasant environment, variety type of cold and hot drinks and also traditional menu for breakfast, lunch and dinner.
It is really a good choice for holiday evenings, for relaxing and energizing while enjoying the spectacle of old Tehran, alongside the youth culture.
Iran 7 . Persian Architecture . Kashan . House Tabatabai
Persian Architecture: Tabatabai House is the name of one of the most beautiful architectural works in Iran. Built in 1840 in Kashan, in the Isfahan province, it was the property of a wealthy Iranian family.
This residence stretches over an area of 4700 square meters and includes 40 rooms, four interior courtyards, two underground canals.
In the present museum
Personal Filming. October 2017
Sony AX53
11 Top Must Visit Places in Tehran Iran
11 Top Must Visit Places in Tehran Iran
The Grand Bazaar
Right in the heart of the city, the Grand Bazaar is an essential visit for any tourist in Tehran. With over 10 kilometres of labyrinthine alleyways filled with covered shops, haggling customers, and general commotion, you will find everything from jewellery to carpets and pots and pans for sale here. One of Tehran’s oldest areas, this commercial centre is teeming with history and character, and there are some exceptional restaurants dotted around.
Tajrish Bazaar & Imamzadeh Saleh
The bazaar in the northern district of Tajrish is smaller, prettier, and altogether less stressful than the Grand Bazaar (although prices are higher). There is a colourful market of fresh fruit and vegetables, and some excellent touristy shops selling traditional crafts and kitschy memorabilia. Check out the kebab restaurant in the centre of the bazaar, and the teahouse just off the main drag. It’s also worth visiting the stunning adjacent shrine, the Imamzadeh Saleh.
National Museum of Iran
The National Museum of Iran is filled with an impressive range of treasures and objects from the 30,000 years of human habitation in the Iranian plateau. From Stone Age tools to primitive art, from decorated capitals from Persepolis to coins and pottery, the museum features items from the length and breadth of Iranian history. The building itself, designed in the early 20th century with nods to Sassanian architecture, is one of Tehran’s more interesting modern constructions.
Milad Tower (Borj-e Milad)
The Milad Tower is one of Tehran’s most iconic structures, and the most prominent feature of the city’s skyline. Completed in 2007, it stands at an impressive 435 metres, making it the sixth tallest tower in the world. Trips to the head of the tower are inexpensive and worth the effort on a clear day, for nowhere else can beat it for panoramic views of the city. If you want to push the boat out, the tower also boasts a fancy, revolving restaurant.
Azadi Tower (Borj-e Azadi)
Built in 1971 to commemorate 2500 years of Persian monarchy, this iconic tower fuses elements of Sassanian, Achaemenid, and modernist architecture. Literally meaning ‘Freedom Tower’, the ivory-coloured, Y-shaped building is situated in a park in east Tehran, and features a well laid out underground museum. Though not as tall as the Milad Tower, it nevertheless boasts fantastic views of the city from the top floor.
Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art
The Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art boasts the most extensive (and valuable) collection of artworks outside Europe. Although some items have not been exhibited since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, works by big names including Picasso, Monet, Andy Warhol, and Henry Moore are on display, as well as pieces by Iranian artists. The building itself, inaugurated in 1977, is a striking modernist structure, and a great place to meet young, artsy Iranians.
Park-e Jamshidieh
Located in the most northerly reaches of the city, Jamshidieh is a large park in the foothills of the Alborz Mountains. Fresh air and lush surrounds are enough to merit a trip to this out-of-the-way spot, but the outstanding views of the city below are what makes it a must-see. The higher you climb, the better the views become but if you don’t feel like a hike, there are plenty of nice spots for picnicking and drinking tea. It is particularly picturesque in the winter months, when it often receives the first snowfall of the year.
Golestan palace
Just a few minutes from the Grand Bazaar, you will find the magnificent Golestan Palace, a 19th century Qajar royal abode. The palace complex consists of 17 structures in total, including reception halls, museums, throne rooms, and royal quarters, and boasts impressive, well-kept gardens too. The intricate tile work, mirrored interiors, symmetrical fountains, and marble thrones demonstrate the pinnacle of Qajar-era architecture, and provide a sense of the level of opulence the monarchs would have enjoyed.
Mount Tochal
Mount Tochal sits in the mountain range to the north of Tehran, with its peak reaching a staggering 3,993 metres. An excellent challenge for mountaineers, trails set off from Darakeh and Velanjak, with tea houses staggered along the way. If you lack the time or inclination for the trek, a telecabin service will take you all the way up the mountain for a reasonable fee. The top of the mountain also has a small ski piste, with equipment available to rent. Not as impressive as Dizin or Shemshak ski resorts, but ideal for a quick afternoon getaway.
Shahr-e Rey
An important political and religious centre that predates Tehran, Shahr-e Rey lies just to the south of the capital, and is accessible by the metro (it’s the most southerly station). Its highlights include a quaint traditional bazaar, the ruins of a Sassanian fortress, and a Seljuk tomb, but the main draw is the Imamzadeh Shah Abdol Azim....!
???????? Amazing Iran Part 10 (Final)
Visiting Persian Garden @Vanak Village, Imamzadeh Saleh Mosque and Tajrish Bazaar in Shemiran, Valiasr Street and Tochal.
Winter Trip to Dizin-Tehran, Iran
12-20 February 2017
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Iran Golestan Palace & Museum, Tehran city كاخ موزه گلستان شهر تهران ايران
March 30, 2017 (Persian calendar 1396/1/10)
Tehran province (استان تهران)
Tehran city (شهر تهران)
Golestan Palace & Museum (كاخ موزه گلستان) Geo coordinate
35°40′47″N, 51°25′13″E
The Golestan Palace کاخ گلستان, literally the Palace of Flowers, is the former royal Qajar قاجار complex in Iran's capital city, Tehran.
One of the oldest historic monuments in the city of Tehran, and of world heritage status, the Golestan Palace belongs to a group of royal buildings that were once enclosed within the mud-thatched walls of Tehran's arg ارگ تهران (Citadel).
It consists of gardens, royal buildings, and collections of Iranian crafts and European presents from the 18th and 19th centuries.