The Alexander Mansion Is a mystic story (Collection) of Count Alexander ( an imaginary character ) life style and his wife, the main personage of a 6 season-story, who live in a grand mansion in a Georgian-Style located in Edinburgh, 1918.
" The Alexander Mansion" is a collection of 81 oil paintings created from 2017 to 2019 depicting the mysterious lifestyle of Count Alexander and his wife, the main characters of a six-chapter story. Located in a large mansion in the middle of a dense garden on the outskirts of Edinburgh, Alexander's Mansion is an intriguing tale that blends visual elements and narrative to bring the viewer into its world. The paintings showcase the couple's grand passions, luxurious habits, and the luxurious mansion they called home. The characters in the collection are all depicted as statues, faded faces, and images from behind, as an intentional avoidance of showing their faces to instill a sense of magic in the story. Edinburgh's foggy and dimly lit atmosphere is incorporated into the collection using erasure techniques and the use of dark and special colors. "It was as if every morning when I went to my personal gallery, I stepped on the first step of the building and opened the door. My soul entered that space, and I walked among the family members, crew, furniture, mansion, and garden, even seeing details that I did not cover in the story. With the end of the last painting and the completion of the story, I slowly closed the mansion door and left them in their imaginary peace." ~Proshat Ghodsi. Alexander, a fictional character depicting an artistic, calm, and introverted personality, lives in a luxurious Georgian mansion built 300 years ago, along with his wife and three daughters and three sons, their staff, and various sculptures, paintings, and furniture that showcase an authentic British lifestyle. The collection of paintings and its stories have been compiled in a book in English, by Proshat Ghodsi which has been translated into various languages, including French, Persian, Russian, German, Turkish, and Arabic, and has been exhibited in multiple venues, including the Saadabad Palace Gallery, Reza Abbasi Museum, Abgineh Museum, and Glass Painting Museum in Tehran, enhancing the viewer's contemplation and understanding of the space's atmosphere.

 

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