Arts of Allusion: Object, Ornament, and Architecture in Medieval Islam
Autor Margaret S. Gravesen Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 sep 2018
The art of the object reached unparalleled heights in the medieval Islamic world, yet the intellectual dimensions of ceramics, metalwares, and other plastic arts in this milieu have not always been acknowledged. Arts of Allusion reveals the object as a crucial site where pre-modern craftsmen of the eastern Mediterranean and Persianate realms engaged in fertile dialogue with poetry, literature, painting, and, perhaps most strikingly, architecture. Lanternsfashioned after miniature shrines, incense burners in the form of domed monuments, earthenware jars articulated with arches and windows, inkwells that allude to tents: through close studies of objects from the ninth to the thirteenth centuries, this book reveals that allusions to architecture abound acrossmedia in the portable arts of the medieval Islamic world. Arts of Allusion draws upon a broad range of material evidence as well as medieval texts to locate its subjects in a cultural landscape where the material, visual and verbal realms were intertwined. Moving far beyond the initial identification of architectural types with their miniature counterparts in the plastic arts, Margaret Graves develops a series of new frameworks for exploring the intelligent art of the allusive object. These address materiality, representation, and perception,and examine contemporary literary and poetic paradigms of metaphor, description, and indirect reference as tools for approaching the plastic arts. Arguing for the role of the intellect in the applied arts and for the communicative potential of ornament, Arts of Allusion asserts the reinstatement ofcraftsmanship into Islamic intellectual history.
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 0190695919
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: 125 illustrations in color and black-and-white
Dimensiuni: 267 x 183 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.93 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Much as Jonathan Hay's Sensuous Surfaces (2010) offered a new theoretical vocabulary for the applied arts in the guise of a study about Ming and Qing decorative works, attracting readers from diverse fields, Graves's Arts of Allusion articulates an innovative framework for understanding ornamental effects that cuts across specializations in the field of material culture.
Margaret Graves's Arts of Allusion offers a groundbreaking conceptualization of medieval Islamic portable objects, arguing for their rightful place within the broader intellectual history of the medieval Islamic world.... Arts of Allusion is a book that should be required reading not only for scholars of Islamic art but for medievalists more broadly, scholars of material culture, and medieval intellectual history.
This well-written and beautifully illustrated book presents a number of interesting and innovative ways of looking at medieval objects produced across the Islamic world... this is a ground-breaking book that will be of great interest to a wide range of art historians...
Graves's methodology, careful research, and frameworks for analysis of nonmimetic art make for an innovative book that will be an important point of reference for historians of Islamic art and architecture, as well as scholars engaged in the study of objects. Her work has broad implications for the way we understand the links among objects and architecture, and also the place of the object in the discipline.
This volume will be important for future scholarship.
Arts of Allusion can be wholeheartedly recommended for its contribution to the study of Islamic visual culture. Graves offers much more than an iconographic or typological examination of ornament; through her integrated analysis of objects and primary written sources she provides new insights into the cultural and intellectual frameworks informing the perceptions of the makers and consumers of medieval Islamic art.
Exploring analogies between portable objects and monumental architecture, this innovative and beautifully-written book offers new perspectives on ornament, poetics, and visual perception in the medieval Islamic world. It combines formal analysis with the study of primary sources to argue convincingly for the need to acknowledge intersections between artisanal activity and contemporary intellectual currents as intrinsic to the making of Islamic art.
This is a groundbreaking study on the reciprocities between the plastic arts and monumental architecture of the medieval Middle East. Margaret Graves is to be congratulated for having revealed the multiple and variable meanings of the allusive relationships between objects and buildings in the Islamic world. By showing how philosophy, theology, science and literature were integrated into the design, production, and perception of the artworks presented, she offers an important contribution to Islamic intellectual, social, and art history.
Notă biografică
Margaret S. Graves is Assistant Professor of Art History at Indiana University.