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| Public Gallery: (Artist
featured from the forum shiachat.com and
Revert Muslims) |
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GALLERY 8
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| Art Gallery:
(A nice selection of Islamic Arts past and
present. Also showcasing are some prominent up
and coming featured Artist's whose works
can be purchased through this website) |
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Architecture
&
Calligraphy
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Islamic
Art History |
Contemporary
Art
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Abstract |
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Featured
Artist
name:
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POETRY |
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Are you
interested in having your artwork OR poetry
posted here ? Please contact us at jennah@revertmuslims.com
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An
Introduction:
Islamic
art is perhaps the most accessible manifestation of a
complex civilization that often seems enigmatic to
outsiders. Through its brilliant use of color and
its superb balance between design and form, Islamic art
creates an immediate visual impact. Its strong aesthetic
appeal transcends distances in time and space, as well
as differences in language, culture, and creed. Islamic
art not only invites a closer look but also beckons the
viewer to learn more. For an American audience a visit
to the Islamic galleries of a museum such as the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art can represent the first
step toward penetrating the history of a religion and a
culture that are often in the news but are little
understood.
The
term Islamic art may be confusing to some. It not only
describes the art created specifically in the service of
Islam,
but it also characterizes secular art produced in lands
under Islamic rule or influence, whatever the artist’s
or the patron’s religious affiliation. The term
suggests an art unified in style and purpose, and indeed
there are certain common features that distinguish the
arts of all Islamic lands. Although this is a highly
dynamic art, which is often marked by strong regional
characteristics as well as by significant influences
from other cultures, it retains an overall coherence
that is remarkable given its vast geographic and
temporal boundaries. Of paramount concern to the
development of this singular art is Islam itself, which
fostered the creation of a distinctive visual culture
with its own unique artistic language.
Calligraphy
is the most important and pervasive element in Islamic
art. It has always been considered the noblest form of
art because of its association with the Qur’an,
the Muslim holy book, which is written in Arabic. This
preoccupation with beautiful writing extended to all
arts—including secular manuscripts; inscriptions on
palaces; and those applied to metalwork, pottery, stone,
glass, wood, and textiles—and to non-Arabic-speaking
peoples within the Islamic commonwealth whose
languages—such as Persian, Turkish, and Urdu—were
written in the Arabic script.
Another
characteristic of Islamic art is a preference for
covering surfaces with patterns composed of geometric or
vegetal elements. Complex geometric designs, as well as
intricate patterns of vegetal ornament (such as the
arabesque), create the impression of unending
repetition, which is believed by some to be an
inducement to contemplate the infinite nature of God.
This type of nonrepresentational decoration may have
been developed to such a high degree in Islamic art
because of the absence of figural imagery, at least
within a religious context.
Contrary
to a popular misconception, however, figural imagery is
an important aspect of Islamic art. Such images occur
primarily in secular and especially courtly arts and
appear in a wide variety of media and in most periods
and places in which Islam flourished. It is important to
note, nevertheless, that representational imagery is
almost invariably restricted to a private context.
Figurative art is excluded from the decoration of
religious monuments. This absence may be attributed to
an Islamic antipathy toward anything that might be
mistaken for idols or idolatry, which are explicitly
forbidden by the Qur’an.
In
Islamic cultures the so-called decorative arts provide
the primary means of artistic expression, in contrast to
Western art, in which painting and sculpture are
preeminent. Illuminated manuscripts, woven textiles and
carpets, inlaid metalwork, blown glass, glazed ceramics,
and carved wood and stone all absorbed the creative
energies of artists, becoming
highly developed art forms. These works include
small-scale objects of daily use, such as delicate glass
beakers, as well as more monumental architectural
decoration, for example, glazed tile panels from
building façades. Such objects were meticulously
fabricated and carefully embellished, often with rare
and costly materials, suggesting that the people for
whom they were made sought to surround themselves with
beauty.
Royal
patronage played an important role in the making of
Islamic art, as it has in the arts of other cultures.
The construction of mosques and other religious
buildings, including their decoration and furnishings,
was the responsibility of the ruler and the prerogative
of high court officials. Such monuments not only
provided for the spiritual needs of the Muslim community
but often served educational and charitable functions as
well. Royal patronage of secular art was also a standard
feature of Islamic sovereignty, one that enabled the
ruler to demonstrate the splendor of his court and, by
extension, the superiority of his state. Evidence of
courtly patronage is derived from the works of art
themselves, but an equally important source of
information is the extensive body of historical texts
that attest to royal sponsorship of the arts almost
throughout the Islamic period. These historical works
also indicate that only a fraction of such
court-sponsored art has survived; objects made of
precious materials are particularly rare. From the
fourteenth century onward, especially in eastern Islamic
lands, the arts of the book provide the best
documentation of courtly patronage.
Of
course, not all works of Islamic art were sponsored by
the court; in fact, the majority of objects and
manuscripts in museum collections originated elsewhere.
Such works of art—including pottery, base metalware,
carpets, and textiles—have often been viewed as the
products of urban, middle-class patronage. These objects
nonetheless frequently reflect the same styles and make
use of the same forms and techniques employed in courtly
art.
Whether
produced in a courtly or an urban setting or for a
religious context, Islamic art is generally the work of
anonymous artists. A notable exception is in the sphere
of the arts of the book. The names of certain
calligraphers are well known, which is not surprising
given the primacy of the written word in Islam, as are
those of a number of painters, most of whom were
attached to a particular court. The identification of
these artists has been based on signed or attributed
examples of their works and on textual references. Given
the great number of extant examples, comparatively few
signatures are found on metalwork, pottery, carved wood
and stone, and textiles. Those signatures that do occur,
combined with rare evidence from contemporary textual
sources, suggest that families of artists, often over
several generations, specialized in a particular medium
or technique.
As
this discussion may suggest, Islamic art forms a large
and complex subject. While there are several different
means of classifying Islamic art, the text that follows
adheres to the four-part chronological division used in
the Islamic galleries at the Los Angeles County Museum
of Art. This system of classification is intended to
emphasize the overall unity of Islamic art within each
of the four chronological periods, while also taking
into account the numerous dynasties whose successive
reigns punctuate Islamic history and whose patronage had
an important impact on the development of Islamic art.
The early Islamic period, seventh through tenth century,
covers the origins of Islam; the creation of a
religious, political, and cultural commonwealth; and the
formation of a new style of art. In the early medieval
period, from the eleventh through the mid-thirteenth
century, and the late medieval period, the
mid-thirteenth through the fifteenth century, various
regional powers emerged, which promoted diverse forms of
cultural expression. Finally, the late Islamic period,
the sixteenth through the eighteenth century, was an age
of great empires, in which powerful dynastic patronage,
more than ever before, helped to promote and shape
artistic styles.
source:
http://www.lacma.org/islamic_art/islamic.htm
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