Collage and Golbahar Hayati

Collage and Golbahar Hayati

She started the collage with color masterbatch seeds and then chose the fabric because of the variety of colors and plant fibers and the ease of preparation, and she was able to create luxurious works that became a part of the Razavi Museum and the Garden of the Iranian Art Museum in Tehran. Due to the innovation in the creation of the work, she was ranked the senior in the country in 3 consecutive periods in the Razavi International Festival.
Her subjects mostly include the literary and artistic elites of Iran and the world, as well as world-famous figures and symbols, in this regard, the tombs of Cyrus the Great, Khayyam, Attar and Hafez, the Eiffel Tower and the Monastery of Saint and Persepolis and the portraits of Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, the former Emir of Kuwait, the king and queen of Sweden, Sheikh Mohammed, the ruler of Dubai, Serdar Berdimuhamedov, the president of Turkmenistan, and Samantha Sommaruga, the Austrian politician.
Her tools are cloth and tweezers (for taking very small and centimeter pieces of cloth), scissors in different sizes and shapes, and a spatula, handmade herbal glue, and a 3 mm MDF board. The most important features of her works include avoiding the use of chemicals and metal and the first plane of the work and the used fabrics and glue are all made of plant fibers and they do not harm the nature.
She created the famous painting of Rembrandt's Night Watch in the form of a fabric collage measuring 110*90 cm with thousands of pieces of fabric and participated in the Lang Leve Rembrandt competition, which, according to the judges, this work entered to the Rijksmuseum in the Netherlands.