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  1. The Tunis Institute of Fine Arts (French: Institut supérieur des beaux-arts de Tunis) is a fine arts institute in Tunis, Tunisia. Founded in 1923, its seat was located at the Dribat Ben Abdallah near Tourbet el Bey with its former name Tunis School of Fine Arts.

  2. Pôle du savoir et du savoir-faire, LISBAT est la plus grande institution artistique en Tunisie, une institution pionnière dans l’enseignement des Arts Plastique et du Design, ce n’est pas par hasard qu’on l’appelle « Ecole-mère ».

  3. Trained at the Tunis Institute of Fine Arts and later in Paris, his unique style, rooted in Tunisian heritage, earned him acclaim among Tunisian painters and in the contemporary art scene globally. Gorgi’s artworks, born of his Tunisian roots, continue to enrich artistic expression worldwide.

  4. For nearly two decades, Keskes set out to research how glass was made throughout Mesopotamia, Pharaonic Egypt, Phoenician Byblos, and later closer to home in Carthage, today a suburb of the nation’s capital Tunis and a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site.

    • Tunis Institute of Fine Arts1
    • Tunis Institute of Fine Arts2
    • Tunis Institute of Fine Arts3
    • Tunis Institute of Fine Arts4
  5. academic institution in Tunisia. This page was last edited on 13 October 2023, at 15:49. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Safia_FarhatSafia Farhat - Wikipedia

    Her role as the first female and first Tunisian director of the postcolonial School of Fine Arts in Tunis helped change the schools colonial, male-dominated culture to one that admitted and produced a generation of female artists and teachers.

  7. Etablissement scientifique relevant de l´Université de Tunis. Créé en 1923 sous forme d´un Centre pour l´enseignement des beaux-arts a l´impasse Ben Ayed dans la Médina de Tunis et en 1930 le centre est transformé en une Ecole des Beaux-arts.