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Regime Change

New Horizons in Islamic Artand Visual Culture

Nine essays first presented at the Historians of Islamic Art Association’s seventh biennial symposium, entitled “Regime Change.”

The essays collected in this volume highlight some of the regimes of thought and changing trends that structure the field of Islamic art history. The authors present new research exploring the intentions of patrons, the agency of craftsmen, and their responses to previous artistic production, thereby allowing artifacts and monuments to be set within their historical, social, and artistic contexts.

In their contributions, Annabel Teh Gallop, Dmitry Bondarev, and Umberto Bongianino discuss significant changes to Qur’an production due to dynastic and political regime changes in Sumatra and the Malay Peninsula, as well as in Borno and Morocco in Africa. Corinne Mühlemann looks at changes in the role and status of designers and weavers making silk in Khurasan in the post-Mongol period. Lisa Golombek, Michael Chagnon, and Farshid Emami explore Safavid art and architecture, focusing on the material and sensorial qualities of a group of tiled arch panels tiles with narrative scenes, a delicately painted vase, and the clocks of the main square of seventeenth-century Isfahan. Regime change also comes about through technological shifts, and Ulrich Marzolph and Yasemin Gencer ask how the rise of photography and new printing techniques shaped the production, exchange, and transmission of images in Iran and Turkey.
 

160 pages | 150 color plates | 9.57 x 9.65 | © 2024

Art Series

Art: Middle Eastern, African, and Asian Art

Middle Eastern Studies

Religion: Islam


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Reviews

“The articles in this handsome volume reflect the broad range of research interests, issues and methodologies pursued within the Historians of Islamic Art Association community and highlight current, innovative developments in the study of Islamic material culture and the visual arts. In the aggregate they also offer multiple perspectives on the concept of ‘regime change’: historical, typological, technological, and—most intriguingly—metaphorical and symbolic.”

Dr. Marianna Shreve Simpson, Past President (2011-13), Historians of Islamic Art Association

“The articles in this volume amply fulfil the promise of its title. They exemplify the recent expansion of Islamic art into previously underresearched areas such as southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, as well as the conceptual exploration of new fields of sensory and auditory matters, and temporal extension into the twentieth century. The shift to looser definitional boundaries is much to be welcomed.”
 

Prof. Bernard O’Kane, The American University in Cairo

Table of Contents

1. ISLAMIC ART IN THE THIRD MILLENNIUM:
FROM REGIMES TO HORIZONS
Christiane Gruber and Bihter Esener 6
2. MIGRATING MANUSCRIPT ART: THE ‘SULAWESI
DIASPORA GEOMETRIC’ STYLE OF QUR?ANIC
ILLUMINATION
Annabel Teh Gallop 14
3. SHIFTING REGIMES, RESHAPING MANUSCRIPTS:
THE DISAPPEARANCE OF ANNOTATED QUR?ANS
IN BORNO
Dmitry Bondarev 32
4. THE RE-ENDOWMENT OF ALMOHAD QUR?ANS
UNDER THE EARLY MARINIDS (CA. 1250–1300 CE)
Umberto Bongianino 48
5. THE WEAVER’S SIGNATURE? THE DIVISION OF
LABOUR IN THE PRODUCTION OF LAMPAS
WOVEN SILKS
Corinne Mu¨hlemann 64
6. POINTS OF VISION: RECEPTION OF
A LATE SAFAVID TILED ARCADE
Lisa Golombek 80
7. INTERPRETING A LATER SAFAVID VASE:
BETWEEN MATERIAL, OBJECT AND IMAGE
Michael Chagnon 96
8. SENSING TIME AND SOUND IN SAFAVID ISFAHAN:
THE CLOCKS OF THE MAYDAN-I NAQSH-I JAHAN
Farshid Emami 110
9. LITHOGRAPHY AND ITS IMPACT ON THE
ART OF ILLUSTRATION IN IRAN
Ulrich Marzolph 128
10. MUSTAFA KEMAL, PHOTOGRAPHY AND IMAGE
IN 1920S TURKISH MEDIA
Yasemin Gencer 144
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHIES 160

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