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Connecting with Islamic Art at the Metropolitan

Deniz Beyazit, Assistant Curator, Department of Islamic Art

Posted: Wednesday, January 4, 2012

The Lion Court at the Alhambra, Viewed from Beneath the Portico Temple | 2007.250.2

Islamic art, architecture, and cultural traditions are closely related to other artistic movements around the world. In conjunction with the opening of the new Galleries for the Art of the Arab Lands, Turkey, Iran, Central Asia, and Later South Asia, which house works from the Met's Department of Islamic Art, I'd like to take this opportunity to highlight related objects from the Museum's other curatorial departments.


American Wing

 

Tile

     Tile, ca. 1882–84
     Made by J. and J. G. Low Art Tile Works (American, 1877–1907)
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Purchase, Bequest of Adeline R. Brown, by exchange, 1977
      (1977.373.2)

    This interlaced, star-like composition is a typical pattern
    of Islamic geometric ornament.

Mowbray; Harem Scene

     Henry Siddons Mowbray (American, 1858–1928)
     Harem Scene, ca. 1884–1900
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Gift of Edward D. Adams, 1926 (26.158.3)

    This American Orientalist painting depicts a Harem scene—
    part of the private domestic sphere—showing three
    women set in an architectural theme decorated with furniture
    and objects inspired from the Islamic world.

 

 

Ancient Near Eastern Art

 

Sasanian Plate

     Plate, ca. 5th century A.D.
     Iran; Sasanian
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Purchase, Lila Acheson Wallace Gift, 1994 (1994.402)

    This silver plate depicts a hunting scene from the tale of the
    Sasanian king Bahram Gur and his musician Azada, whose
    narrative and iconography are strongly represented within
    the eastern Islamic world.

 

Arms and Armor

 

Spanish helmet

     Helmet, late 15th century
     Spanish
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     From the Lord Astor of Hever Collection Purchase,
     The Vincent Astor Foundation Gift, 1983 (1983.413)

    This helmet is inlaid with enamels from Nasrid-Muslim Spain.

 

Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas

 

Sumatran headdress

     Woman's Headdress, 19th–early 20th century
     Indonesia, Sumatra
     Minangkabau people
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Gift of Fred and Rita Richman, 1988 (1988.143.120)

    This headdress, and the bracelet below, were created by 
    the Minangkabau, an Islamic people from Sumatra.

Woman's Bracelet

     Woman's Bracelet, 19th–early 20th century
     Indonesia, Sumatra
     Minangkabau people
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Gift of Fred and Rita Richman, 1988 (1988.143.121)

 

Asian Art

 

Ewer

     Ewer, late 7th–first half of the 8th century
     China; Tang dynasty (618–907)
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Gift of Stanley Herzman, in memory of Gladys Herzman, 1997 (1997.1.2)

    This Chinese ewer demonstrates the sancai or three-glaze
    technique, which inspired early Islamic splashed ware. While
    the three-color glaze may have inspired Islamic potters, the
    ewer's shape was actually inspired by earlier Western or West
    Asian (Sassanian, Byzantine, Roman?) forms.

 

The Costume Institute

 

robe

     Mariano Fortuny (Spanish, 1871–1949)
     Robe, early 20th century
     House of Fortuny (Italian, founded 1906)
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Gift of Mrs. Francis Coleman and Mrs. Charles H. Erhart Jr., 1975
     (1975.383.3)

    The alternating tulips and pine cones on this early
    twentieth-century robe are typical motifs of Ottoman art.

 

Drawings and Prints

 

Jacopo Ligozzi

     Jacopo Ligozzi (Italian, 1547–1627)
     A Janissary "of War" with a Lion, 1547–1627
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1997 (1997.21)

    Janissaries were infantry units that formed the Ottoman sultan's
    household troops and bodyguards.

 

Egyptian Art

 

sphinx

     Sphinx of Hatshepsut, ca. 1473–1458 B.C.
     New Kingdom, Dynasty 18
     Joint reign of Hatshepsut and Thutmose III
     Egypt
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Rogers Fund, 1931 (31.3.166)

    The sphinx is a popular theme in medieval Islamic art.

 

European Paintings

 

Vermeer's Maid Asleep

     Johannes Vermeer (Dutch, 1632–1675)
     A Maid Asleep, 1656–57
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Bequest of Benjamin Altman, 1913 (14.40.611)

    Vermeer's sleeping maid sits at a table that is covered with
    a Turkish carpet.

 

European Sculpture and Decorative Art

 

Ewer and Basin

     Ewer and Basin (Lavabo Set), ca. 1680–85
     Moldovan, Probably made at Chisinau Court Workshop
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Wrightsman Fund, 2005 (2005.62.1, .2a, b)

    This ewer and basin (lavabo set) comes from the Ottoman
    Balkans. It was once owned by Prince Dimitri Cantemir of 
    Moldavia, "tribute" hostage at the Istanbul court for eleven
    years, where he was educated and called one of the most
    important early "Western" scholars of the Ottoman culture.

 

Greek and Roman Art

 

flask

     Glass flask in the form of a fish
     Roman, 3rd century A.D.
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Bequest of Mary Anna Palmer Draper, 1914 (15.43.168)

    Zoomorphic glass flasks continued to be produced in early 
    Islamic Egypt and Syria.

 

The Robert Lehman Collection

 

flask

     Pilgrim flask, ca. 1500–1525
     Italian (Venetian)
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
     Robert Lehman Collection, 1975 (1975.1.1167)

    This pilgrim flask's flattened, ovoid body typifies a form that
    was very common in medieval Islamic Syria, from which it
    may have been inspired.

 

Medieval Art and The Cloisters

 

pyx

     Master working for Abd al-Rahman III (r. 912–961)
     Pyx, ca. 950–75
     Spanish, Made in Córdoba
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York,
     The Cloisters Collection, 1970 (1970.324.5)

    This Spanish pyx was made in Córdoba during the rule of the
    Umayyad caliph Abd al-Rahman III (r. 912–961).

 

Nineteenth-Century, Modern, and Contemporary Art

 

Matisse Odalisque

     Henri Matisse (French, 1869–1954)
     Odalisque with Gray Trousers, 1927
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York,
     The Walter H. and Leonore Annenberg Collection,
     Gift of Walter H. and Leonore Annenberg, 1997
     Bequest of Walter H. Annenberg, 2002 (1997.400)
     © 2011 Succession H. Matisse /
     Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

    This painting is part of a series devoted to the odalisque, here
    shown lying in an interior scene decorated with objects from
    the Islamic world.

 

Musical Instruments

 

Kamanche

     Kamanche, ca. 1869
     Iran (Persia)
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York,
     The Crosby Brown Collection of Musical Instruments, 1889 (89.4.325)

    The kamānche is a Persian bowed string instrument that is
    widely used in the classical music of the eastern Islamic world.
    Its appearance in the tenth century preceded European versions
    by one hundred years.

 

Photographs

 

Lion Court, Alhambra

     Charles Clifford (Welsh, 1819–1863)
     [The Lion Court at the Alhambra], 1862
     The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York,
     Gift of C. David and Mary Robinson, 2007 (2007.250.2)

    This photograph shows one of the masterpieces of Islamic
    architecture, the famous Alhambra in Spain.

 

Connections Reaches 100

Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO

Posted: Friday, December 30, 2011

2005.100.1

At the beginning of 2011 we embarked on a project called Connections, a Web feature that explored the collections through themes that were personal to Met staff.

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A Great Year at the Met

Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO

Posted: Thursday, December 22, 2011

Throughout 2011, our global audience has helped bring new energy to the Met. It's an exciting time for the Museum, marked by outstanding scholarship and incredible new ways to access and explore our collections. This short video captures some of my thoughts about this moment and the tremendous potential the Met's future holds. It comes with my thanks for your continued interest and support.

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Google Goggles

Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO

Posted: Friday, December 16, 2011

Have you ever seen a work of art—on a poster, in a book, on a billboard, or even in one of the Met's galleries—and simply had to know more about it? Now you can. I'm pleased to announce a new collaboration with Google that lets you take a picture of a work of art with your mobile device and link straight to more information on metmuseum.org. This is yet another milestone in our effort to provide global access to our collections.

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Today in Met History: December 13

Julie Tran Lê, Library Associate, The Irene Lewisohn Costume Reference Library

Posted: Tuesday, December 13, 2011

«Sixty-five years ago today, on December 13, 1946, The Costume Institute's first exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum opened to the public.

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The 9/11 Peace Story Quilt

Posted: Wednesday, December 7, 2011

«In commemoration of the tenth anniversary of the events of September 11, 2001, the Museum mounted a small exhibition, The 9/11 Peace Story Quilt in the Ruth and Harold D. Uris Center for Education. On September 11, 2011, Museum visitors from all walks of life participated in various special events at the Museum: a lecture by artist Faith Ringgold—who designed the quilt with New York City youth—poetry readings, and a memorial concert.

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The Met Around the World

Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO

Posted: Tuesday, November 22, 2011

«Today we launch a new section of the Met's website: The Met Around the World. The work of the Metropolitan Museum reflects the global scope of its collections and extends across the world through a variety of initiatives and programs including exhibitions, excavations, fellowships, professional exchanges, conservation projects, and traveling works of art. All these activities are now consolidated here to allow you to search them by location or category.

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Fellows Series: The Etched Decoration of German Renaissance Armor

Stefan Krause, 2010–2011 Andrew W. Mellon Fellow

Posted: Friday, November 18, 2011

«Armor made from steel plates that covered almost the entire body was developed around the late fourteenth century in Northern Italy, and spread north of the Alps soon after. Most early examples were plain, but by the middle of the fifteenth century armorers began to emboss surfaces with ridges and grooves and add gilt copper-alloy applications, transferring current tastes in civilian fashion to create sumptuous garments of steel. The turn of the sixteenth century saw the first elements of armor embellished with etching, a technique that dominated the decor until the end of armor as an art form, in the middle of the seventeenth century.

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Today in Met History: November 15

Rebecca Weintraub, Intern, Museum Archives

Posted: Tuesday, November 15, 2011

«One hundred and twenty-five years ago today, on November 15, 1886, The Metropolitan Museum of Art's Board of Trustees officially approved the establishment of the institution's first curatorial departments—the Department of Paintings, Department of Sculpture, and Department of Casts.

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The Challenge of Interpreting Caricatures and Satires

Nadine Orenstein, Curator, Department of Drawings and Prints

Posted: Wednesday, November 9, 2011

«Caricatures and satires are generally created to comment on specific events or moments in history. The Headache, Enrique Chagoya's print of President Obama, for example, reminds us of the strident debates that took place more than a year ago about changes to the U.S. healthcare system. Chagoya based his image on a nineteenth-century print by George Cruikshank entitled The Head Ache that illustrates a man attacked by hammering and drilling demons who are the source of his woes.

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