Livre - Islamic tiles

B 5099

Description

Livre

British museum

Porter Venetia

Presentation materielle : 128 p.

Dimensions : 24 cm

Ceramic tiles have been produced for over a thousand years in the heartlands of the Islamic world, from Iraq in the ninth century to Turkey in the nineteenth. The wealth of designs and colors used to decorate mosques, shrines and palaces later provided inspiration for European artists and designers. This book first explains the various techniques of the craftsmen, including the invention of lustre and the use of blue-and-white, and then traces the development of tilework, beginning with the pre-Islamic tradition, through the major periods and across a wide geographic area. Trends in tile decoration followed those of other forms of Islamic art, ranging from the influence of Chinese ornament to the glorification of the word of God through beautiful calligraphy. The illustrations are drawn primarily from the extensive collections of the British Museum, supplemented by examples of tilework which can still be seen on buildings throughout the Islamic lands. Venetia Porter is an Assistant Keeper in the Department of Oriental Antiquities in The British Museum. With 43 color and 71 black and white illustrations

Preface, p. 6 1. Craftsmen And Techniques, p. 8 2. ‘Like the Light of the Sun’ Lustre Tiles 9th-11th Centuries, p. 21 3. An Explosion of Tiles Iran, Anatolia and Syria 12th-14th Centuries, p. 32 4. Veils of Splendour Iran and Central Asia 14th-19th Centuries, p. 62 5. Lotus Flowers and Tulips Syria and Turkey 15th-19th Centuries, p. 92 Maps of the Islamic World, p. 122 Further Reading, p. 124 Illustration Acknowledgements, p. 126 Index, p. 127

Bibliogr. p. 124-125. Index