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Basil Al Bayati (Arabic: باسل البياتي; born 13 May 1946) is an Iraqi-born architect and designer who has lived and practiced for the most part in Europe, in particular, London and who Neil Bingham, in his book 100 Years of Architectural Drawing: 1900–2000, has described as "an architect in whom East meets West."
The mosque and Islamic centre was designed by Dr. Basil Al Bayati, and took more than six years to complete at a cost of £3.5M. [3] The main hall can hold over one thousand worshippers, [4] with women praying on a balcony overlooking the hall. The mosque holds chandeliers and a vast carpet, with very little furniture.
Perhaps the most prominent voice of the Metaphoric architectural school at present is Dr. Basil Al Bayati whose designs have been inspired by trees and plants, snails, whales, insects, dervishes and even myth and literature. [8] He is also the founder of the International School of Metaphoric Architecture in Málaga, Spain. [9]
Hashem Muhammad al-Baghdadi (1917–1973), calligrapher [11] Niazi Mawlawi Baghdadi, 19th-century painter, decorator and calligrapher [12] Ala Bashir (born 1939), painter, sculptor and plastic surgeon [13] Basil Al Bayati (b. 1946), architect and designer; Wafaa Bilal (b. 1966), performance artist, author and educator
Al-Bayati (Arabic: البياتي, romanized: al-Bayātī) is a surname.It is connected to the Iraqi al-Bayat tribe. The ancestry and ethnicity of the al-Bayat tribe is contentious. The tribe's ancestry is often linked to the Oghuz Turkic Bayat tribe [1] and its ethnicity described as Iraqi Turk
The original "Find My iPhone" app was announced on June 10, 2009 and released in June 2010 alongside iPhone OS 3. At the time, it required a paid subscription to Apple's MobileMe service. [10] It was made free of charge with the iOS 4.2.1 update on November 22, 2010, but only for devices introduced in 2010.
Al-Bayati was influenced by the Middle Eastern Sufi figures. One example is a poem by Al-Bayati entitled "A’isha's Mad Lover" in his book, Love Poems on the Seven Gates of the World (1971): "In this context Al-Bayati’s poetry becomes Sufi in default, since he assumes the position as a modernist whose aspirations for an earthy paradise have not materialized."
The Pizzeria Napoli is a pizza restaurant in Baghdad, Iraq.The owner, Waleed al-Bayati (sometimes in western press as Walid Khalid), previously lived in Italy and along with his brother, set up the restaurant on Saturday, June 27, 2003 [1] when former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's government fell after the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq.