Islamic Visual Culture, 1100-1800

£200.00

Islamic Visual Culture, 1100-1800

Constructing the Study of Islamic Art, Volume II

History of architecture Regional / International studies Society and culture: general General and world history Ancient history Religion: general Islam Civil engineering, surveying and building

Author: Oleg Grabar

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Collection: Variorum Collected Studies

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 1st August 2024

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9781040245750


Islamic Visual Culture, 1100-1800

is the second in a set of four volumes of studies on Islamic art by Oleg Grabar. Between them they bring together more than eighty articles, studies and essays, work spanning half a century by a master of the field. Each volume takes a particular section of the topic, the three other volumes being entitled: Early Islamic Art 650-1100; Islamic Art and Beyond; and Jerusalem. Reflecting the many incidents of a long academic life, they illustrate one scholar's attempt at making order and sense of 1400 years of artistic growth.

They deal with architecture, painting, objects, iconography, theories of art, aesthetics and ornament, and they seek to integrate our knowledge of Islamic art with Islamic culture and history as well as with the global concerns of the History of Art. In addition to the articles selected, each volume contains an introduction which describes, often in highly personal ways, the context in which Grabar's scholarship developed and the people who directed and mentored his efforts.

The focus of the present volume is on the key centuries - the eleventh through fourteenth - during which the main directions of traditional Islamic art were created and developed and for which classical approaches of the History of Art were adopted. Manuscript illustrations and the arts of objects dominate the selection of articles, but there are also forays into later times like Mughal India and into definitions of area and period styles, as with the Mamluks in Egypt and the Ottomans, or into parallels between Islamic and Christian medieval arts.

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