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History of Art thesis and dissertation collection >
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5489
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Files in This Item:
| File |
Description |
Size | Format |
Catalogue Parts 1 and 2.zip | | 324.47 MB | Adobe PDF | | Catalogue Parts 3 and 4.zip | | 440.2 MB | Adobe PDF | | Figures.zip | | 518.57 MB | Adobe PDF | | | Graves2010.pdf | | 2.03 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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| Title: | Worlds writ small: four studies on miniature architectural forms in the medieval Middle East |
| Authors: | Graves, Margaret Susanna |
| Supervisor(s): | Hillenbrand, Robert |
| Issue Date: | 26-Nov-2010 |
| Publisher: | The University of Edinburgh |
| Abstract: | While academic discussion of ornament within medieval Islamic art has laboured
much over the codification and meaning of certain forms, there has been relatively
little research to date on the visual and iconographic function of architecture as
ornament in this context. Those few authors that have dealt with this issue have
focused overwhelmingly on two-dimensional architectural representations, largely
ignoring the considerable body of portable objects from the medieval Middle East
that imitate architecture through three-dimensional forms, whether in a mimetically
coherent fashion or in a more elliptical or reconfigured manner. This thesis proposes,
first and foremost, that there is significant cultural meaning inherent in the use of
architecture as an inspiration for the non-essential formal qualities of portable objects
from the medieval Islamic world. Through iconographic analysis of the relationships
that such objects form with architecture, an understanding of both full-size
architecture and its miniature incarnations in the medieval urban context is advanced
within the thesis.
To maximise the intellectual scope of the study whilst still enabling an in-depth
treatment of the material, four discrete studies of different object groups are
presented. All of these are thought to date from approximately 1000 to 1350 CE, and
to come from the core Middle Eastern territories of Persia, Syria and Egypt. The first
chapter examines the glazed ceramic ‘house models’ believed to originate in late or
post-Seljuq Persia. The second discusses six-sided ceramic tables from the same
milieu, and more numerous related tables produced in Syria during the same period.
In the third chapter carved marble jar stands from Cairo, apparently produced from
the twelfth century onwards, are analysed. The final chapter, on metalwork, broadens
its approach to encompass two very different strains of production: inkwells from
Khurasan and incense burners from the breadth of the Middle East.
Because much of the thesis focuses on material that has been dramatically
understudied, it performs the primary action of compiling examples of each of the
object types under study. Though this information is presented as a catalogue
vi
sommaire, this component of the thesis is not regarded as an end in itself. The major
tasks of the thesis are the identification of the architectural tropes that are being
evoked within each object group, analysis of the manner in which those forms have
been modified to suit the miniature context of the objects, and the location of
meaning within such diminutive evocations of architectural form. Through
comparisons with other objects, full-size architecture, two-dimensional
representations of architecture and historical texts, the thesis moves discourse on this
type of motif in Islamic art beyond the traditional and sometimes superficial
discussion of ‘ornament’, re-setting architectural iconography within larger contexts
of urbanisation and city culture of the medieval Islamic world. |
| Sponsor(s): | Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) University of Edinburgh Historians of Islamic Art Association. |
| Keywords: | Islamic art, medieval architecture ornamentation house models miniature architectural iconography medieval |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5489 |
| Appears in Collections: | History of Art thesis and dissertation collection
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