Islamic Art's unique artistic language can sometimes be difficult to read in terms of western iconography due to its foundations in the Islamic way of life that is guided directly by the laws of the religion. Rarely have I witnessed information that has made the connection between Western and Islamic patrons and the art produced for them so clear as the lecture I listened to by Jerrilyn Dodds last week. My desire to communicate all the wonderful wisdom I garnered after listening to her lecture lead me down a path that was familiar yet remote at the same time, finally culminating in the Garden of Eden that I never fail to find in art.
Jerrilynn Dodds, Dean of Sarah Lawrence College has been giving a three part lecture series, Islamic Art and Society, in conjunction with the opening of the New Galleries for the art of the Arab Lands, Turkey, Iran, Central Asia and Later South Asia at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I was lucky enough to attend the second in the series, Luxury Arts and the Art of the Book which focused on the secular elements used in the representation of Islamic kingship. Dodds presented an interesting perspective on the patrons and the content of these works of art.
The 10th century plate with Arabic Inscription from Iran, that greets you as soon as you enter the New Galleries was the object Dodds started her discussion with. The prosaic inscription "Planning before work protects you from regret; prosperity and peace" she mused has a Hallmark-like quality. Dodds' interpretation of the abstract design as the desire of people wanting to be engaged intellectually was and idea that held great appeal.
The second object Dodds talked about was a oliphant Hunting Horn similar to the one on the left. The value of the material attesting to the magnitude of the ruler and images of animate beings to his liberal understanding of Islam. The hunting horn was decorated with hunting animals and the mythological figure, Harpy. Dodds defined an Islamic ruler owning such an object as his right to own land, to hunt and as a reminder of these privileges to his people. She also connected the images of animals to the myth of palace art and mentioned Arabian Nights written at the time of the Abbasids, as deliberating the rights of Kings.
Next, we touched upon the Golden Age of Islam (9th-12th century) a time for great intellectual and cultural creativity, when intellectuals had found and translated into Arabic the classical manuscripts from antiquity. Dodds mentioned the great curiosity for science and philosophy at this time. The richest city in the world, Baghdad, founded by the Abbasids, was syncretic compounding Hellenistic, Christian, Persian, Jewish, Zoroastrian and Hindu ideas. The following manuscripts were the visual manifestations of the connection and influence of these different cultures on Islamic culture.
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Arabic Translation of the Materia Medica of Dioscorides, 1229 Topkapi Palace, istanbul |
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Page from Dispersed Manuscript of an Arabic Translation of the Materia Medica of Dioscorides, Abdallah ibn al-Fadl, 1224, Iraq Gallery 454 |
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Byzantine miniature of Saint Mark, mid to late 12th century |
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Astrolabe of 'Umar ibn Yusuf ' 1291, Yemen Gallery 454 |
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From the Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices by al-Jazari 1315, Syria Gallery 454 |
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al-Wasiti, Yahya ben Mahmud Al-Hariri's Maqamat Baghdad, 1237 (Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris) |
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Caravan of Pilgrims traveling to Mecca, al-Wasiti, Yahya ben Mahmud Al-Hariri's Maqamat Baghdad, 1237 (Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris) |
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A Literary Reunion, al-Hariri's Maqamat, (Institute of Oriental Studies, St. Petersburg, Russia) |
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Woman with a herd of Camels, al-Wasiti, Yahya ben Mahmud Al-Hariri's Maqamat Baghdad, 1237 (Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris) |
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Rashid al-Din Fazl-Allah, Jami al-Tavarikh Iran, 1400 (Metropolitan Museum of Art) |
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Eskandar (Alexander the Great) enters the Land of Darkness, Rashid al-Din Fazl-Allah, Jami al-Tavarikh, Iran, 1314 (Edinburgh University Library) |
If Rashid al-Din's Jami as-Tawarikh was the history of the Mongols, the Shahnameh or the 'Book of Kings', the most important creation of New Persian Literature, was the national epic of the Iranian people. Written by Ferdowsi, twice as long as Homer's Iliad and Odysseus taken together, it blended Iran's ancient myths and legends with accounts of major events in its past, celebrating the survival of a civilization that went back 7000 years.5 The first known illustrated copies of the Shahnameh date from the time shortly after the Mongols conversion to Islam under Ghazan Khan (1295 -1304). Ghazan and the succeeding Islamic emperors considered art patronage as a reflection of the majesty of their kingship. The emergence of Persian manuscript painting which was also the regeneration of Iran's political power under the Mongols coincides with this era. The Shahname was a source of pride for Iran who was recovering its territorial, political and cultural history.6 There are many copies present because commissioning opulent copies of the Shahname became almost a royal duty. The stories lent themselves to heroic actions, dramatic deeds and divine glory.
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Iskandar (Alexander the Great) at the talking tree. Shahnameh, Il-Khanid period, 1330- 1336 Iran, Tabriz (Freer Gallery of Art) |
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Zal is sighted by a caravan Shahnameh, Attributed to Abdul Aziz Iran, Tabriz, Safavid Period, 1525 (Art and History Collection LTS) |
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Isfandiyar's Funeral Procession from the Great Mongol Shahnama Iran, Tabriz, 1330's (Metropolitan Museum of Art) |
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The Feast of Sada, Shahnama of Shah Tahmasp Attributed to Sultan Muhammad, Iran, Tabriz 1525 (Metropolitan Museum of Art) |
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The Court of Gayumars,Shahnama of Shah Tahmasp Iran, Safavid, 1522-1525 (Aga Khan Museum, Toronto, Canada) |
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Tahmuras Defeats the Divs, Shahnama of Shah Tahmasp Iran, Tabriz, 1522-1524 (Metropolitan Museum of Art) |
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The Emperor's Carpet detail
Iran, second half 16th century
Gallery 462
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The Safavid Prince Haidar Mirza's Entrance to Istanbul in 1590 from the Divan of Mahmud Abd al-Baki Ottoman Iraq, Baghdad, 1590-95 (Metropolitan Museum of Art) |
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The Shaikh al-Islam Discoursing to an Audience from the Divan of Mahmud Abd al-Baki Ottoman Iraq, Baghdad, 1590-95 (Metropolitan Museum of Art) |
When viewing the above miniatures with these concepts in mind, it is amusing to see that the Shaikh al-Islam (the most senior religious official similar to an archbishop) is the most important personage in the miniature on the left since his turban is huge. The hierarchy becomes even more pronounced in a military scene with all the different ranks lined up next to one another. There are some very intriguing details that caught my attention in the above miniatures. First was the way the artist handled the tree in the Shaikh al-Islam miniature; it starts out as almost a painting or a window on the wall behind him and then comes out of the picture plane to become a part of the border decoration forming a connection between the border and the inner picture. This is a very interesting concept since in miniature painting as in illumination there are very strict rules that dictate how a page is supposed to be set up and artists are limited from realistic representation. I like to think that in doing so, the artist used artistic license to break thorough the limiting barriers set forth.
The back view of Prince Haidar entering the city in the miniature on the right is another that merits furter investigation. The foreshortening, the almost natural gait of the horse are little details that seem to be little secrets hiding in open sight.
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Tughra of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificient, Ottoman Turkey, Istanbul, 1555 |
It is said that "The Qur'an was revealed in Mecca, Read in Cairo and Written in Istanbul." - this particular quote I think, explains the prominence of Ottoman calligraphy and illumination in Islamic art. Of course, it is impossible to ignore the influence of Tabriz since the artists from the area immigrated to Istanbul after the conquest of Selim I, of the city in 1514. Another story from history that sheds light on the high regard with which the Ottomans held the art of the book, is that Selim I (Suleiman's father) who was known for his fierceness was said to have held his calligraphy master's ink pot while he worked.
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Gentile Bellini, Portrait of Mehmed II, 1480 dated 25 November 1480 (The National Gallery, London) |
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Sultan Mehmet II Smelling a Rose Ahmed Siblizade, 1480 (Topkapi Palace Museum Library, Istanbul) |
Gentile Bellini painted this portrait of Sultan Mehmet II during a 'state-sponsored" visit to Istanbul. Sultan Mehmet is portrayed under a marble arch, a universal symbol of triumph appropriate for the Sultan who conquered Constantinople in 1453. The fictive framework within the painting, although not of any consequence for the Ottoman court artists, demonstrates Gentile's ability to creates a three dimensional space, one of the primary virtues of Italian Renaissance painting. 8 It is very interesting to compare this portraits side by side with the miniature from the same period by the Ottoman court painter Ahmed Siblizade and pick out the influences as well as the differences in their respective approaches to the same sitter. While the Belini represents the consummate ruler with allusions to the lands he ruled in the form of the golden crowns lined up around him, the jewel encrusted cloth hanging over the parapet, and a bored expression on his face, the Ottoman miniature has the conqueror of the capital of the Byzantine empire smelling a rose.
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Alexander visits the Sage Plato, from Khamsa (Qunitet) of Amir Khusrau Dihlavi, attributed to Basawan, Pakistan, Lahore, 1597-98 (Metropolitan Museum of Art) |
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Portrait of Shah Jahan on Horseback India, 17th Century (Metropolitan Museum of Art) |
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Portrait of Shah Jahan on Horseback :Leaf from the Shah Jahan album, attributed to Payag, 1628 (Metropolitan Museum of Art) |
The unique style of painting initiated during the reign of Akbar developed into a more naturalistic style worked out using European artistic techniques like perspective and chiaroscuro by the 17th century. Looking at the two portraits of Shah Jahan that Jerrilynn Dodds referred to as passage portraits, it is interesting to note the horse and the flora rendered naturalistically while the surface is still left flat. Unlike earlier Islamic miniatures which were the illustrations for an accompanying text, these studies seem to be individualized portraits. One of the most prominent feature of these portraits is the use of distinct Western iconography; I just love the halos around Shah Jahan's head and the putti that seem so familiar in such an unexpected context.
Over centuries of existing with and absorbing other cultures, Islamic patrons as well as artists seem to have found a visual vocabulary of their own that exists within the restriction placed on the representation of living beings. The boundaries set before them seems to have set them on a path toward abstraction and an incredibly imaginative pictorial language. Dodds has a very elegant explanation for these boundaries as the way to eviscerate being seduced by images in order to reach the divine. Finally, Jerrilynn Dodd's closing remark is one I take to heart and feel explains not just the reasoning of abstraction in Islamic representation but also my personal philosophy - "Most profound personal truths can be found only intellectually."
1 Al Hassani, Salim T. S., Elizabeth Woodcock, and Rabah Saoud. "The Elephant Clock." 1001 Inventions: Muslim Heritage in Our World. 2nc ed. Manchester, Great Britain: Foundation for Science Technology and Civilisation, 2007. 16. Print
2 Ibid., 316
3 Grabar, Oleg. Islamic Visual Culture, 1100-1800. Aldershot, England: Ashgate/Variorum. 2006. Print
4 "The Fitzwilliam Museum : An Explosion of Images." The Fitzwilliam Museum : Home. Web. 11 Nov. 2011 <http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/gallery/shahnameh/vgallery/section2.html?p=26>
5 Ibid., <http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/gallery/shahnameh/index.html>
6 Ibid., <http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/gallery/shahnameh/patronage.html>
7 Welch, Stuart C. "78 Pictures from a World of Kings, Heroes, and Demons: The Houghton Shah-nameh." The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 29.8 (1971): 341-57. Print
8 Carboni, Stefano. Venice and the Islamic World: 828 - 1797 : Intitut Du Monde Arabe, Paris, Ocotober 2, 2006 - February 18, 2007: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, March 27 - July 8, 2007. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art [u.a., 2007. 303. Print
9 Department of Islamic Art. "The Art of the Mughals before 1600". In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000 - http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/mugh/hd_mugh.htm (October 2002)
Amazing! Such a pleasure to read this entry on Islamic art. Keep up the great work, we will check in often!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the comment. I wonder if you saw my last book review - Color in Islamic Art and Culture - http://www.3pipe.net/2012/02/color-in-islamic-art-and-culture.html
DeleteMore will be coming soon.
I second the previous commenter's sentiments :) - this is an amazing article and it explains so much while opening up new, interesting inquiries.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad I came across your blog!
Ana,
DeleteWelcome to Sedef's Corner. I hope to have more about Islamic Art here soon.
Thank you for this post, Sedef! The 10th century plate is one of my all time favorite pieces of art -- what a treat to see it here! For me, it's a perfect example of the beauty of simplicity. Breathtaking. And I love your comparison of the two portraits of Mehmet II -- what do you (or others) make of the difference in representation -- symbols of royalty in one, a rose in the other?
ReplyDeleteKaren,
DeleteThe two portraits are the perfect embodiment of the difference in cultures. The Italian portrait is in the style of the Renaissance portrait that has a long history going all the way back to antiquity. The Turkish miniature has a more humble approach - it represents Mehmet as a man who can appreciate God's creations and recalls him as a devout ruler... the rose represents God (Allah) is Islamic art.
I rather like the 10th century plate myself. It is all that is refined and perfect.
Thanks.
ReplyDeleteI am extremely impressed with your writing skills as well as with the layout on your blog.
ReplyDeleteIs this a paid theme or did you customize it yourself?
Anyway keep up the nice quality writing, it is rare to see a great
blog like this one today.