Layla Soudavar Diba (Persian: لیلا سودآور-دیبا) is an Iranian-American independent scholar[1] and curator, specializing in 18th/19th-century and contemporary Persian art and the Qajar period. She has curated various exhibitions, such as the Royal Persian Paintings: The Qajar Epoch 1783-1925 (1998-1999) exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum and co-curated Iran Modern (2013) at New York’s Asia Society.[2][3]
Iranian-American art historian and curator
Layla Diba in a Qajar art conference at Louvre Museum, 2018Firman [royal mandate] of Persian king Muhammad Shah Qajar, Gift of Layla S. Diba, in memory of Mahmood T. Diba, to Metropolitan Art Museum
Early life and education
She was born as Layla Soudavar, into an Iranian-American family.[where?][when?] She is related to Farah (née Diba) Pahlavi, the former Shahbanu (Empress) of Iran.[4]
Layla S. Diba holds a B.A. from Wellesley College and a M.A. and Ph.D. from the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University (NYU).[when?]
Career
Tehran
From 1973 to 1975, Diba was an art advisor for the Private Secretariat of HM Queen Farah Pahlavi of Iran.[5][6]
From 1975 to 1979, Layla Diba was the founding director of Negārestān Museum (Persian: موزه نگارستان), a public collection of eighteenth and nineteenth century Iranian painting, based in Tehran, Iran.[6] She was the first woman museum director in Iran. The museum was shut down during the 1979 Iranian Revolution. The Negarestan Museum was established by Queen Farah Pahlavi to promote the Persian art of the 18th and 19th-century.[2]
New York City
Layla Diba served as the associate curator and of Asian Art and as a curator of Islamic Art at the Brooklyn Museum.[7][8] She has been an art advisor of various organizations such as, the Metropolitan Museum of Arts. She is a member of Encyclopædia Iranica's board of trustees[9] and the Soudavar Memorial Foundation.
She was married to the businessman Mahmoud T. Diba, who was among the victims of Swissair Flight 111 crash in 1998.[14][15][16] Diba has a son. She currently lives in New York City, New York.
Amanat, Abbas; Balaghi, Shiva; Behdad, Ali; Diba, Layla S.; Ekhtiar, Maryam; Grabar, Oleg; Luft, Paul; Najmabadi, Afsaneh; Scarce, Jennifer M. (2001). Re-presenting the Qajars: new research in the study of 19th-century Iran. Iranian studies. Vol.34. Priscilla Parsons Soucek, Heidi Walcher, Ehsan Yar-Shater. Society for Iranian Studies.
Journey Through Asia: Masterpieces in the Brooklyn Museum of Art; with Amy G. Poster. Brooklyn Museum Bookshop, 2003.
Iran Modern (Co-Editor with Fereshteh Daftari). Asia Society Museum, New York, 2013
See also
Persian art
Qajar art
References
Cotter, Holland (2013-09-05). "Modernism Blooming in Iran". The New York Times. ISSN0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-12-08. Fereshteh Daftari and Layla S. Diba, both independent scholars
Colacello, Bob (2014-01-08). "Farah Pahlavi". Interview Magazine. Retrieved 2019-12-08. We talked over tea at the apartment of her cousin Layla Diba, the former curator of Islamic art at the Brooklyn Museum
"webcasts captions". Library of Congress. 2017. Negarestan Museum in Tehran from 75 to 79. Arts advisor for the private secretariat of Her Majesty Queen Farah Diba, and the Hagop Kevorkian curator of Islamic art at the Brooklyn Museum of Art. In 2006, Dr. Diba was invited to develop programming and strategy for the future of the Guggenheim's Abu Dhabi Museum and to serve on the museum's Asian Art Council and the Middle East focus group.
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