The Fine Arts Museum of the Fine Arts Sector called on the citizens to stay at home, through its official page on the website "Facebook" saying "Stay in your home and we will give you the museum to yours", in order to address the Corona virus, and one of the most important holdings of the Museum of Fine Arts in Alexandria You will see it in (Online Museum), Works by Margaret Nakhle and White Gold.
The works of artist Margaret Nakhle represent a distinguished mark in contemporary Egyptian photography, and she has created a vast and profound space for her that made her a great place, because her works are gaining poetic spirit and spiritual tendency with a special touch from those transparent and whimsical troughs that belong to realism and expressionism, and this came according to sources, articles Esmat Doustashi and Salah Bessar.
From Lebanon, Margaret's family came to trade and expanded the horizons of knowledge about life outside the country in the late nineteenth century. In 1908, the artist was born in the same year in which the National School of Fine Arts opened its doors in Cairo, which Prince Youssef Kamal created from his own money, as if the emergence of the Egyptian plastic creativity had agreed With the emergence of the fledgling girl to light in a sign that reflected optimism about the birth of a star in the sky of Egyptian art.
From the beginning of childhood, she was drawn in perseverance and love, and she embellished her speeches when she was six years old with flowers, decorations and inscriptions, and at the age of thirteen she began painting natural scenes of the countryside on any material she encountered and was fond of drawing portraits of her friends, and when her parents noticed her passion for drawing and convulsing the artistic spirit in herself Year after year, this encouraged her father to entrust her to Madame "Casanato", the Italian artist who settled in Alexandria. With perseverance and persistence, her talent began to reveal herself and develop her artistic abilities and participate in public exhibitions.
Nakhleh studied arts in France, then she obtained an educational diploma in 1939 and enrolled in the Louvre School in 1951 to study the art of wall painting, then she worked as a teacher at the Institute of Fine Arts for Girls in Cairo.
Margaret Nakhle went through different stages of art, as her first paintings were greatly influenced by Western currents, especially the influential school, as is evident in her painting "In the Café" as a model for the beginning of her works before she possesses her own distinctive style of art, which she moved to through popular and approved topics On human gatherings such as people in open gardens celebrating Eid al-Adha and harvesting cotton
Margaret died on September 30, 1977, leaving behind her highly specific and brilliant works in the history of Egyptian art.