Sunday, November 3, 2013

Farewell, Hasan


My friend Hasan sent me this picture a few years ago, as a joke. We had recently met online through our art history blogs, and this was the first photo that I ever saw of him. I remember thinking that the photo was both funny and strange, and I wondered if Hasan was actually a weird person. (He wasn't weird, at least not in a bad way!) Here Hasan is doing an impersonation of the Commodus as Hercules bust, which he sent not long after I wrote a post on the sculpture on my art history blog. The image in the background is a reproduction of Alma-Tadema's A Roman Emperor AD 41; Alma-Tadema was Hasan's favorite classicist painter and this reproduction hung in his home.

Hasan suddenly passed away about a week ago, due to an epileptic seizure. He was thirty-seven years old, the same age as his favorite artist Raphael. It breaks my heart to know that this kind person, who had friends all over the world, died alone. If someone had been with him in his apartment at the time, perhaps he wouldn't have died. The online art history community was consequently put in shock, and I spent several days this past week

Hasan and I became friends in in May 2010, after I commented on a post that he wrote about Botticelli on his Three Pipe Problem blog. We became online blogging friends since that point, which was easy since we had similar interests in Renaissance and Baroque art. I have been going through our emails and correspondences this past week. With all of the tweets, emails, and blog comments combined, we communicated hundreds of times. And I know that I am just one among dozens and dozens of people that Hasan met online, particularly in the small online art history community. He crafted and made sure to maintain good friendships with art historians and those interested in art all over the globe.

Although we didn't share a lot of personal information about ourselves, we did get to know each other rather well and could perceive a lot about each other's character. I remember offering some support and condolences when his dad passed away a few years ago, and I discussed what it was like when my mom passed away. Most of the time, though, we talked about art and art history. We also shared an interest in Renaissance and Baroque music and sometimes would talk about the soprano Emma Kirkby (see Hasan's post on Kirkby HERE). He once sent me this picture, saying that it was one of his most prized possessions:


Although I wrote a tribute to Hasan on my art history blog, I wanted to have a little bit more of a personal tribute here. I also wanted to remember a lot of the ways that we interacted with each other, especially through our blogs.

MY CONTRIBUTIONS ON HASAN'S 3PP BLOG
"BLOG BACK" POSTS (TOPICS IN WHICH WE INSPIRED EACH OTHER)
GIFTS FROM HASAN
Hasan was a very kind and thoughtful person. Over the course of our friendship, we mailed a few things to each other. More often than not, Hasan was the one who had something to mail to me. I do remember shipping one or two things to him in Australia, including some rare volumes on Raphael by Shearman that he had purchased online from an American dealer. I want to remember the things that he sent to me. Some of these books and movies I still haven't read or watched in entirety:
  • A hardbound copy of Alexander Graham-Dixon's Caravaggio (which I won in a giveaway hosted by Hasan in the fall of 2010, based on a limerick that I wrote): 
    • There was a young ten'bristic wizard
      Who painted a boy with a lizard
      These paintings sit prett'ly
      In London and Italy
      Yet always give shock to one's gizzard
  • A copy of How to Mellify a Corpse by Vicky Leon (a writer with whom Hasan became friends)
  • A bookmark with my moniker "M" (the imagery is inspired by medieval and Renaissance manuscript decoration) which Hasan found for me when he was in Florence
  • A copy of Clovis Whitfield's Caravaggio, which Hasan mailed to thank me for shipping the Shearman volumes to him
  • Burned copies of the Fame or Fortune series
  • A burned copy of the Artemisia Gentileschi 1997 film
  • My review copies of Caravaggio and His Followers in Rome and The Origins of Baroque Art in Rome were due to Hasan's contact with Inbooks.
 Like the photo at the top of this post, Hasan sent me a few other funny photos, including these two that he made as a joke around the time that I traveled to Texas to see the Caravaggio and His Followers exhibition:



It's really strange to realize that I won't see tweets, emails, or posts from Hasan anymore. The day that Hasan died, I told J that blogging would not be as fun without Hasan around. In many respects, Hasan held the art history community together. Our friend Frank described Hasan as "the sun that our fledgling blogging community revolved about." Tributes to Hasan have been pouring in online:


































http://storiedellarte.com/2013/11/dear-hasan-sorry-for-the-delay.html


When I met other art history bloggers in New York earlier this year (see photo of me with Ben, Frank and Sedef), we all agreed that Hasan had brought us all together. All four of us lamented that he was not able to come to the CAA conference, especially since Ben and I had written letters of recommendations for Hasan to get a travel grant. Even though Hasan is no longer with us in the online community, we still have each other. And in truth, Hasan is still living in our hearts and memory. I really appreciated that Ben wrote a tweet directed to Hasan's account last night, mentioning a conference talk on da Vinci's "Salvator Mundi" which Hasan would have liked. All of us can (and will) still think of him as we continue to discuss art history online.

3 comments:

ixoj said...

That is an excellent tribute to Hasan. I'm glad you could have such a great relationship with a friend so far away.

Melinda said...

I'm sorry for your deep loss. What a tragedy also for the art history world. Hugs.

Annette said...

Oh Monica, this is such a lovely post and tribute to Hasan. I am so sorry about his sudden death. He leaves a great hole in the Art Historian circle and your personal life. Though you know I don't comment on Alberti's Window, I have enjoyed and benefitted from so many things Hasan posted and shared. I'm grateful that you shared your thoughts and feelings here, as well as all these links. Love you.