Studies in the Islamic Arts of the Book

£150.00

30 x 24 cm
556 pp. 258 illus.
Publication: April 2012
ISBN 1 904597 49 1
ISBN-13 978 1 904597 49 0

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Book Description

The studies collected in this volume, some of them rather difficult of access, date mostly from the last fifteen years and focus primarily on Persian book painting of the 14th to the early 16th centuries. In this period Iran dominated the art of book painting in the Islamic world. The articles reprinted here examine various aspects of this, the golden age of Persian painting. They range from the period of Mongol rule, when the impact of Far Eastern themes and modes radically transformed the heritage bequeathed to Iran by Arab painting — a textbook case of the clash of civilisations — to the dawn of the modern era and the swansong of the classical style of Persian painting under the early Safavids. Yet other articles focus on the roots of book painting in the themes and styles developed in painted ceramics, on medieval Qur’anic calligraphy, on bookbinding and on the remarkably original variations played on the hitherto hackneyed theme of the figural frontispiece by Arab painters.

Two major leitmotifs are explored in this selection of essays. One is provided by the constantly varying interpretations of the Shahnama (The Book of Kings), the Persian national epic, and especially the tendency of painters to interpret this familiar text in terms of contemporary politics. The other is the interplay of text and image, which highlights the tendency of painters to strike out on their own and to leave the literal text progressively further behind while they develop plots and sub-plots of their own. These enquiries are set within the context of a concerted effort to explore in detail how Persian painters achieved their most spectacular visual effects. In its combination of general surveys and closely focused analyses of individual manuscripts, this collection of articles will be of interest to specialists in book painting and in Islamic art as a whole.

Contents:

  • Preface
  • The Uses of Space in Timurid Painting
  • The Iconography of the Shah-nama-yi Shahi
  • The Iskandar Cycle in the Great Mongol Shahnama
  • Images of Muhammad in al-Biruni’s Chronology of Ancient Nations
  • The Arts of the Book in Ilkhanid Iran
  • The paintings of Rashid al-Din’s ‘Universal History’ at Edinburgh
  • Mamluk and Ilkhanid Bestiaries: Convention and Experiment
  • The Qur’an Illuminated
  • The relationship between book painting and luxury ceramics in 13th-century Iran, The Message of Misfortune
  • Literature and the visual arts; New Perspectives in Shahnama Iconography
  • Erudition exalted: the double frontispiece to The Epistles of the Sincere Brethren
  • The Shahnama and the illustrated book
  • Islamic Bookbinding
  • Index

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