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  • Review: Arts

    Review: Arts: Beauty and harmony: In today's climate of cultural
    conflict, the V&A's spectacular new gallery of artefacts from all
    across the Islamic world reveals less a clash of civilisations than a
    refreshing union of east and west, discovers Jason Ell

    The Guardian - United Kingdom; Jul 15, 2006
    JASON ELLIOT

    A transformation has occurred at the V&A. This week, after three
    years of renovation and redesign, the new Jameel gallery of Islamic
    art will open its doors to the public with a spectacular collection
    of artefacts from across the Islamic world, many of which have never
    before been seen on display.

    The new gallery, dedicated to the memory of its Saudi benefactor,
    Abdul Latif Jameel, is both timely and long overdue. Visitors to
    the V&A's former Middle Eastern display of Islamic art may recall
    a confusingly structured and poorly lit collection of disparate
    artefacts, overlooked by the sombre and greenish presence of a giant
    carpet. This - the famous Ardabil carpet - was said to be one of the
    finest Persian carpets in the world. However, it looked more like
    something dredged from a pond.

    All this has changed. A spectacularly reconfigured display of over
    400 objects from the museum's 10,000-piece Islamic collections,
    sensitively interpreted by senior curator Tim Stanley, now looks set
    to rival comparable collections around the world. The centrepiece
    of the gallery is none other than the Ardabil carpet, rescued from
    its former gloom and ingeniously displayed at floor level, as was
    originally intended by its 16th-century makers.

    Rebuilding the entire gallery around the 50-square-metre marvel
    imposed multiple challenges on designers. The greatest of these was
    to allow the carpet to be viewed horizontally, but to protect it
    from undue levels of light and dust. The innovative solution has
    been to surround it with an enclosure of non-reflective glass (be
    careful - it's almost invisible), free of structural supports. This
    is made possible by a giant protective canopy above the glass walls,
    fitted with fibre-optic lighting and suspended by steel cables from
    the ceiling joists overhead. At long last, the delicate colours and
    intricacy of the carpet's pattern - created from a staggering 30m
    hand-tied knots - may now be appreciated at close quarters.

    The Ardabil carpet is also a reminder of the days when the appreciation
    of things Islamic was less eclipsed by political issues. To William
    Morris, who in 1893 petitioned for its purchase from a London dealer,
    the "singular perfection" of the Ardabil carpet was an inspiration: "To
    us pattern-designers," he wrote, "Persia has become a holy land." Other
    designers, such as Owen Jones and William De Morgan - whose iridescent
    tiles imitated techniques pioneered by Muslim artists a thousand years
    earlier - were at the forefront of a European fascination with Islamic
    design. Their enthusiasm encouraged the building of English country
    homes based on Mogul architecture, pavilions in the oriental style,
    and many a Turkish smoking-room and Moorish conservatory around
    the capital.

    The European attraction to Islamic art did not, of course, begin
    in the 19th century. Throughout the middle ages, highly prized
    specimens of Islamic craftsmanship entered the treasuries of churches
    and aristocratic homes, both through trade and as booty. European
    monarchs were crowned in robes woven in Sicily, one of the great
    creative workshops of the Muslim artist; Fatimid rock crystal ewers
    from north Africa were used to display Christian relics; and Turkish
    and Persian rugs were favoured as royal wedding presents.

    Fine examples of all these luxury goods are to be found in the
    gallery. Others, such as the lustre ceramics produced in 15th-century
    Spain and Italian inlaid metalwork called Veneto-Saracenic, testify to
    a fertile exchange of artistic techniques between Muslim and Christian
    cultures of the Mediterranean. In the eastern Islamic lands, too,
    styles and technologies from China were taken up and developed by
    Iranian artisans, whose ingenuity underpinned the art of the later
    Mogul and Ottoman empires.

    In today's climate of cultural divisiveness, this sense of
    interconnectedness is refreshing. It suggests for Islamic art a global
    significance, and tells not so much of a clash of civilisations, but of
    a resounding chorus. Islamic art is, after all, probably the world's
    greatest artistic success story. Soon after the earliest Islamic
    conquests of the Middle East in the late seventh century, artists
    drawing on the existing traditions of the region began to produce
    art and architecture with its own distinctive personality. Easily
    differentiated from its Greco-Roman and Hellenistic predecessors,
    it spread through the burgeoning empire with extraordinary speed. The
    universal appeal and adaptability of this new artistic mode allowed
    its themes and principles to be taken up by artists from the Atlantic
    coast to the Gobi desert, enriching thereby the vast and intervening
    blocs of culture.

    The Arab, Turkish, Persian and central Asian contributions to
    Islamic art are all represented in the new V&A gallery, and there
    are outstanding examples from each. Visitors can admire giant Qur'an
    pages commissioned for Mamluk sultans, swollen with monumental
    lines of exquisite calligraphy, or marvel at Timurid-era miniature
    paintings composed with microscopic precision. There is a series of
    large-scale 19th-century oil paintings from Iran (unseen for decades),
    and a dramatic wall-sized display of glazed tilework from 14th-century
    Uzbekistan. One of the tiles from a 14th-century tomb near Bokhara,
    deeply incised with swirling shades of green and turquoise, has been
    deliberately exposed to the visitor's touch. The towering minbar, or
    staired mosque-pulpit, dedicated to a 15th-century Egyptian sovereign,
    is a masterpiece of geometric design in wood and ivory. And there is
    a dazzling display of vibrant ceramics from the famous Turkish centre
    of Iznik, including a large tilework chimney-piece dedicated to the
    myth of the Seven Sleepers. All these treasures are reminders of
    the high level of patronage afforded to the Muslim craftsman across
    enormous expanses of time and territory.

    Between all these stretches a broad spectrum of lesser but fascinating
    treasures. These are dominated by fabrics and ceramics, but include
    fine examples of astrolabes and compasses, inlaid candlesticks,
    vases and ewers, ivory caskets, enamelled and gilt mosque lamps,
    bookbindings, embroidered robes, stained glass, daggers and begging
    bowls, as well as some rare and touching pieces such as the silken
    vestment woven in Isfahan for an Armenian church, and a child's
    funerary kaftan from Turkey.

    Despite the diverse styles of Islamic art, and the astonishing variety
    of media in which the skill of the traditional Muslim artist has
    been expressed, there are unifying factors that make it immediately
    distinctive. All Islamic art aims for beauty based on coherence
    and harmony. The saying of the Prophet Muhammad, "God is beautiful
    and He loves beauty", orients the artist's aesthetic ideal; and the
    Qur'anic emphasis on the fundamental goodness and significance of life
    informs the goal of creating works of art that will reflect the order,
    goodness and purpose of creation itself.

    The expression of this vision relies on a distinct and threefold
    visual structure, to which a series of panels in the gallery is
    very usefully dedicated. The first of these is calligraphy: for the
    faithful, the graceful ciphers of the Arabic script transmit the voice
    of the Divine, and are the substance of revelation made visible. In
    no other art form has the written word taken on such an exalted role;
    sultans and peasants alike strove to learn its many styles, which
    became disciplines in themselves, and around which an entire science
    of numerological symbolism evolved. The second is geometric design,
    brilliantly exploited in endless variations - intellectually enticing
    and puzzling at the same time. The third panel offers examples of
    idealised plant shapes drawn from the natural world: tendrils, vines,
    buds and flowers, all alluding to the fecundity and abundance of
    nature, and symbolically linked to the Qur'anic evocation of paradise
    as a luxuriant garden.

    At the simplest level, these elements comprise the fundamental
    repertoire of the traditional artist; at a profounder level, they
    celebrate the relationship between God, man and nature. They are to
    some extent mutable - geometric patterns can form letters, and letters
    can be used to create pictures - and are combined in almost infinite
    and sophisticated variations of immense beauty. Great art, according
    to Ruskin, "is that in which the hand, the head and the heart of man
    go together"; it is precisely this insight that was so well understood
    by the traditional Muslim artist, whose finest works simultaneously
    appeal to the devotional, intellectual and aesthetic sensibilities of
    the onlooker. The most refined expressions of this exacting discipline
    - whether carved on to a paper-thin dried leaf or stretched across a
    monumental facade - are thus transformed from objects of mere visual
    delight into powerful focuses of spiritual contemplation.

    Recent scholarship has also begun to delve into the Muslim artist's
    use of geometric principles in designs as diverse as the layout
    of pages of the Qur'an to the structure of entire mosques. Behind
    these lie aesthetic as well as symbolic considerations, reflecting a
    reverence throughout Islamic cultures for the philosophical dimension
    of mathematics, for numbers and the shapes derived from them. In
    this sense, Islamic art extends a fascinating bridge between the
    intellectual heritages of east and west, and throws light on the
    Islamic role as a transmitter of classical learning into Europe
    through the medium of Arab culture. Despite the "exotic" attraction
    of many of the motifs and styles used in Islamic art, deeper study
    reveals a more rational foundation, coherent and rigorously structured.

    The enormous challenge of designing a gallery in which to order
    meaningfully artefacts produced over a span of 1,000 years and three
    continents has been diligently met. Roughly speaking, the Jameel
    gallery is divided in half between artefacts with either a secular or
    a religious function. This is a problematic but necessary dichotomy,
    since the whole of Islam is underpinned by a theocentric vision,
    wherein the worldly and spiritual are not so forcefully divided
    as in other forms of belief. But the looseness of this separation
    deliberately highlights a common misconception about Islamic art as
    a whole. While it is true that art destined for an overtly religious
    context rarely contains images of human forms, many of the items
    on display prove that Islam's doctrinal "ban" on graven imagery -
    originally a Jewish tradition, absorbed into Islam in its earliest
    years - was interpreted differently at different times, rather than
    explicitly laid down in the Qur'an.

    Along its length the gallery traces a historical line, with the
    earliest exhibits nearest the entrance. Here, Roman capitals and
    Sassanian vases from the pre-Islamic period suggest how Is lamic
    artisans took up existing artistic prototypes and shaped them to the
    evolving vision of the Muslim world.

    One important characteristic of the gallery is the interpretive
    support available to the visitor. There are interactive maps showing
    the territorial extent of Islamic cultures; several videos expand
    on themes of religious and courtly patronage; and poetry from the
    Shahnameh of Ferdowsi can be heard alongside a display of inscribed
    tiles. Attention is also drawn to the limitations of the term "Islamic
    art" to describe the artistic output of such diverse cultures; and
    the care that has gone into the displays themselves is immediately
    obvious. Colour and light abound.

    A critic might draw attention to the predominance of ceramics, or
    to the lack of musical or scientific instruments - both pioneering
    achievements of the Islamic Middle East. But the gallery does not
    claim to be exhaustive, and has attempted not to acquire new material,
    but to re-explore its existing holdings. It has put one of its most
    generous donations to excellent use. It also demonstrates just how far
    the western understanding of this complex artistic heritage has evolved
    since the days of the museum's earliest collectors. It will be the envy
    of the museum's other galleries and of collections internationally,
    and, 150 years on, will amply fulfil the V&A's original writ to bring
    the splendour and richness of Islamic art to the greater world.

    The new Jameel gallery opens at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London
    SW7, on July 20. Details: 020-7942 2000. Jason Elliot's most recent
    book is Mirrors of the Unseen: Journeys in Iran (Picador).

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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