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ISTANBUL: Exhibition documents 600 years of dialogue between Turkey

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  • ISTANBUL: Exhibition documents 600 years of dialogue between Turkey

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 9 2014

    Exhibition documents 600 years of dialogue between Turkey and Poland

    9 March 2014 /HATÄ°CE KÃ`BRA KULA, Ä°STANBUL


    To arrange a meeting with a close friend of your
    great-great-grandfather in order to learn about his life is one of the
    opportunities which is nearly impossible to seize in your lifetime,
    even though many of us have a deep thirst to obtain knowledge about
    the past experiences of our relatives.

    But now, a similar experience awaits both Turkish and Polish citizens
    in İstanbul's Sakıp Sabancı Museum (SSM) which is presenting its most
    recent historical exhibition, `Distant Neighbor, Close Memories: 600
    Years of Turkish-Polish Relations,' from March 7 to June 15.

    As its title suggests, the show is held as part of the celebratory
    events marking the 600th anniversary of Turkish-Polish diplomatic
    relations, which started in 1414 when King Ladislaus Jagiello of
    Poland sent two envoys, Jakub Skarbek of Gora and Gregory the
    Armenian, to the court of the Ottoman sultan Mehmed I Çelebi in Bursa.

    The exhibition showcases a total of 348 items, including sultans'
    clothes, carpets, armor and paintings, to shed light on the results of
    the cultural, political and economic connection between the two
    distant countries during the wars, conflicts and peace up to the end
    of the 17th century.

    These pieces are on loan from the collections of 35 Polish museums,
    churches, archives, libraries and monasteries and Ä°stanbul-based
    institutions such as the Topkapı Palace Museum, the Museum of Turkish
    and Islamic Art and the Sadberk Hanım Museum.

    The displayed items are placed in the three floors of the exhibition
    venue in such a way that they reflect the dialogue between Poland and
    Turkey, SSM director-curator Nazan Ã-lçer pointed out during the show's
    press preview on Thursday morning.

    Lives of Ottoman and Polish rulers explored

    `We would like to explore the personalities and families of both the
    Ottoman sultan Mehmed IV, [who played a part in the 1672-76
    Polish-Ottoman War] and Polish King John III Sobieski, [who played a
    major role in the Siege of Vienna which resulted in the defeat of the
    Ottomans],' Ã-lçer said.

    The museum director also referred to the peaceful relations between
    the two countries, giving the example of the Ottomans' refusal to
    recognize the 1795 partition of Poland by Austria, Russia and Prussia.
    `The Ottomans preserved the protocol place reserved for the Polish
    ambassador in the palace. On formal state occasions, it was always
    declared that the Polish ambassador was delayed in his journey and
    unable to attend,' according to the press release for the exhibition.

    Polish Minister of Culture and National Heritage Bogdan Zdrojewski
    said the countries' mutual respect is based on information and the
    organizers of the exhibition have tried to provide an opportunity to
    witness history. `Art events can bring us together and we have to
    respect differences while doing so,' the minister said. Zdrojewski
    thinks the exhibition title perfectly reflects the character of the
    relations between the two countries which have many similarities
    despite geographical and cultural distances.

    The travels of Polish ambassadors to the Ottoman lands, the Ottomans'
    export of commercial products to Poland and the spoils of war
    remaining from a defeated Ottoman army are among the main sources of
    the similarities between the two countries.

    As a demonstration of this, Ã-lçer drew the press members' attention to
    the design used on the materials of the Polish clergy's clothes and
    the carpets that adorned the homes of the rich Polish people of the
    time. Beata Biedronska-Slota from the National Museum of Cracow wrote
    an article about the same subject for a book about the exhibition.
    `The best examples of Turkish handcraft, including carpets ¦ silk
    fabrics with designs and clothes, had been unceasingly brought to the
    lands of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth since the Middle Ages
    thanks to the trade initiated by the Armenians,' the article says.
    Polish kings, nobleman and upper class citizens ordered works of art
    from the Ottoman lands, according to Biedronska-Slota.

    Ottoman taste influences Polish fashion

    The exhibition also reveals the impact of Ottoman taste on Polish
    fashion. Visitors can see the portraits of Polish people who dressed
    the way Ottomans did. `Commercial and cultural relations between
    Poland and Ottoman Turkey, which began in the 15th century and reached
    their peak in the 17th and 18th centuries, made major contributions to
    the arts in both countries, in particular influencing the manners and
    dress of the Polish elite,' Ã-lçer was quoted as saying in the press
    release.

    `Since a relationship going back to 600 years could not be represented
    by material from Poland alone, we were obliged to find a contemporary
    equivalent for every object brought from that country,' the museum
    director comments. While one wall of the exhibition space presents the
    portraits of the family members of a Polish king, on the opposite wall
    can be seen the family of an Ottoman sultan.

    A section of the show displays objects -- such as weapons, armor, a
    gunpowder flask and a tent -- the Ottoman army had to leave behind
    following their defeat at the Second Siege of Vienna in 1683. These
    items were shared by the noble families of Poland, Ã-lçer noted, and
    twice expressed her gratitude to Polish institutions that have
    preserved these items with the utmost care for long years.

    Shedding light on diplomatic relations

    A series of gravures, personal items, medals, oil-on canvas paintings
    and letters along with other written documents such the 1699 Treaty of
    Karlowitz -- which marks of the end of the Ottoman control in a large
    part of Central Europe -- are among the items the exhibition uses to
    inform viewers about diplomatic relations and the results of the wars
    between Poland and Turkey.

    `In the 17th century, changing power balances and alliances in Europe
    and the policy pursued by the Habsburgs in Eastern Europe resulted in
    the confrontation between the Ottoman Empire and the Kingdom of
    Poland. This culminated in the Second Siege of Vienna in 1683. The
    developments that led up to this climax ¦ the First and the Second
    Battle of Khotyn,' are all revealed thanks to these series of items,
    according to the press release.

    The historical developments in the Ottoman Empire and Poland after the
    Second Siege of Vienna are also investigated in the show. The
    post-1699 period covers the partitioning of Poland, some Polish
    patriots and soldiers seeking refuge in the Ottoman lands and the
    Polish battalion led by Sadık PaÅ?a that fought with the Ottoman army
    during the Crimean War. Some series of maps, paintings and personal
    items from the exhibition also shed light on such these events.

    The exhibition will be accompanied by a series of events, including
    screenings of Polish films, discussions attended by Polish directors,
    concerts by Polish musicians and educational workshops for children.

    Warsaw National Museum Director Agnieszka Morowinska, who was also
    present at the press review, said she hopes this exhibition will
    provide further encouragement to attract more Polish people to Turkey
    as Polish people are already interested in the cultural heritage of
    Ä°stanbul.

    For visiting hours and ticket prices, go to muze.sabanciuniv.edu.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/news-341527-exhibition-documents-600-years-of-dialogue-between-turkey-and-poland.html

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