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Back to Islamic Art Galleries Temporarily Closed
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The enlargement, renovation, and reinstallation of the Museum's Islamic Galleries in accordance with current thinking in the field and with modern museological practices is in progress. The Islamic Galleries are currently projected to reopen in early 2011. While the permanent galleries are closed, outstanding objects from the collection can be seen throughout the Museum in various locations (explanation below):



Great Hall Balcony
The south end of the balcony contains a special installation of highlights from the holdings of the Department of Islamic Art. Objects in various media range in date from the seventh to the eighteenth century and in origin from Spain in the west to Central Asia and India in the east. Occasionally, works are displayed thematically. Just around the corner, in the southeastern part of the balcony, is a display of ceramics that shows the interrelationship between works of art from the Islamic world and from China.

   October 22, 2008–February 1, 2009
   The Art of India's Deccan Sultans

Although the Mughals are the best known of India's Islamic rulers, the Deccan region of south-central India was also ruled by Muslim sovereigns who were great patrons of the arts. Based in the great capitals of Ahmadnagar, Bijapur, Bidar and Golconda, these sultans fostered the creation of an artistic tradition unique within India. This installation explores the region's artistic flowering in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries with a selection of paintings, metalwork, and textiles.

Sasanian Gallery, Ancient Near Eastern Art
A significant selection of luxury objects, such as silver vessels, textiles, and stucco wall panels belonging to the early Islamic Near East, are displayed adjacent to Sasanian items in this gallery. This placement shows the striking continuity in both iconography and techniques of manufacture that was sustained in the Near East before and after the Arab invasion. The display illustrates the strength and importance of Iranian heritage in early Islamic art.

Medieval Europe Gallery (Opening November 17)
Greek, Latin, and Arabic were all spoken in southern Italy during the Middle Ages and the arrival of the Normans from northern France in the eleventh century added another layer of cultural interaction. Muslim artists living under Christian rule created luxury items, such as carved ivories, specifically for European consumption. In the Medieval Apse Gallery and Medieval Treasury, ivory works of art made in Sicily are featured adjacent to objects produced in a Christian context, illustrating the artistic and cultural interchange in the Mediterranean from the period of the Crusades to the fifteenth century.

Arms and Armor Galleries
The Arms and Armor Galleries devoted to Islamic art show a broad sweep of armor and weapons and some horse equipment from the various Islamic cultures of Turkey, the Middle East, North Africa, India, Persia, Nasrid Spain, and the Balkans, ranging in date from the fifteenth to the ninteenth century. Included are some great examples of the artistry of Islamic metalwork as well as carvings in jade and rock crystal.

A small selection of Islamic and related pieces may also be viewed at The Cloisters Museum & Gardens in Fort Tryon Park. Included are luster-painted ceramics representing the Mudejar tradition (Islamic work produced under Christian patronage), shown in various galleries.
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