Panel

عنوان Panel
تاریخ انتشار: 1500
محل انتشار Egypt (made) Cairo (made) -
موضوع Africa Islam Woodwork
نوع دیگر
زبان نامشخص
دیجیتال بله
نسخه خطی خیر
ابعاد فیزیکی From register length: 18.625in, From register height: .125in
کتابخانه: Victoria and Albert Museum
شناسه دارایی کتابخانه 1080-1869
شماره ثبت 1080-1869
محل کتابخانه Middle East Section
تاریخ 1500
یادداشت‌ها The use of uncarved ivory and wooden panels set within a geometric pattern is typically associated with the work of Egyptian woodworkers of the late Burji Mamluk and early Ottoman period from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Unlike the delicately carved panels of the earlier Mamluks, later woodworkers adopted the tradition of intarsia (inlaid) work, which embraced bold forms of contrasting colours achieved through the use of ebony and either bone or ivory. The epistemological root of the word intarsia derives from ‘tarsi’, the Arabic word for incrustation. This type of decoration witnessed a long and distinguished history in al-Andalus (southern Spain) from the tenth century, as seen with the minbar of al-Hakim II commissioned for the Great Mosque of Cordoba; from there the technique is believed to have spread north into Italy, and then possibly east into Mamluk Egypt. While this intricate and detailed decorative technique became a characteristic of Nasrid woodwork of southern Spain, it remains unknown exactly how and when this pattern arrived into Egypt; given the popularity of bone and ivory inlay work seen in Ottoman objects from the sixteenth century, the technique could have also arrived through Ottoman craftsmen sometime after 1517. Nonetheless, this type of inlay or marquetry work becomes the dominant style of wood decoration from the sixteenth century, replacing almost entirely the carving techniques of the earlier Mamluk woodcarvers. The arrangement of these panels upon a wooden board reflects a nineteenth century trend of European collecting, and does not reflect the initial context in which these panels would have been used. These panels could have come from different structures, despite the similarity of their technique and decorative style. The rectangular shaped panels would have been used at the top or bottom of a door, while the central eight panel composition may have formed a part of a door for a minbar (Islamic pulpit), mosque, madrasa, or residential property; their decoration is equally suitable for a religious or secular space.
İlişki Paris Exhibition, 1867 Husayn Fahmi Cairo
Malzemeler ve teknikler Carved wood inlaid with ivory and bone Wood Ivory Carving Inlay
Fiziksel açıklama This object is comprised of fifteen panel fragments, each decorated with uncarved ivory set into a dark wood (probably ebony) setting, forming varied geometric patterns. The eight hexagonal panels in the centre are in the intarsia (inlaid) technique, while the rectangular panels along the sides are each decorated with larger bone inlaid to form a complex geometric pattern. The plaques have been arranged onto a late nineteenth century wooden panel.
Üslup Mamluk Egypt (Islamic)
مشاهده در منبع Victoria and Albert Museum Victoria and Albert Museum - موتور جستجوی نسخه های خطی عثمانی
Victoria and Albert Museum - موتور جستجوی نسخه های خطی عثمانی Victoria and Albert Museum

Panel

تاریخ انتشار 1500
محل انتشار Egypt (made) Cairo (made) -
موضوع Africa Islam Woodwork
نوع دیگر
زبان نامشخص
دیجیتال بله
نسخه خطی خیر
ابعاد فیزیکی From register length: 18.625in, From register height: .125in
کتابخانه Victoria and Albert Museum
شناسه دارایی کتابخانه 1080-1869
شماره ثبت 1080-1869
محل کتابخانه Middle East Section
تاریخ 1500
یادداشت‌ها The use of uncarved ivory and wooden panels set within a geometric pattern is typically associated with the work of Egyptian woodworkers of the late Burji Mamluk and early Ottoman period from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Unlike the delicately carved panels of the earlier Mamluks, later woodworkers adopted the tradition of intarsia (inlaid) work, which embraced bold forms of contrasting colours achieved through the use of ebony and either bone or ivory. The epistemological root of the word intarsia derives from ‘tarsi’, the Arabic word for incrustation. This type of decoration witnessed a long and distinguished history in al-Andalus (southern Spain) from the tenth century, as seen with the minbar of al-Hakim II commissioned for the Great Mosque of Cordoba; from there the technique is believed to have spread north into Italy, and then possibly east into Mamluk Egypt. While this intricate and detailed decorative technique became a characteristic of Nasrid woodwork of southern Spain, it remains unknown exactly how and when this pattern arrived into Egypt; given the popularity of bone and ivory inlay work seen in Ottoman objects from the sixteenth century, the technique could have also arrived through Ottoman craftsmen sometime after 1517. Nonetheless, this type of inlay or marquetry work becomes the dominant style of wood decoration from the sixteenth century, replacing almost entirely the carving techniques of the earlier Mamluk woodcarvers. The arrangement of these panels upon a wooden board reflects a nineteenth century trend of European collecting, and does not reflect the initial context in which these panels would have been used. These panels could have come from different structures, despite the similarity of their technique and decorative style. The rectangular shaped panels would have been used at the top or bottom of a door, while the central eight panel composition may have formed a part of a door for a minbar (Islamic pulpit), mosque, madrasa, or residential property; their decoration is equally suitable for a religious or secular space.
İlişki Paris Exhibition, 1867 Husayn Fahmi Cairo
Malzemeler ve teknikler Carved wood inlaid with ivory and bone Wood Ivory Carving Inlay
Fiziksel açıklama This object is comprised of fifteen panel fragments, each decorated with uncarved ivory set into a dark wood (probably ebony) setting, forming varied geometric patterns. The eight hexagonal panels in the centre are in the intarsia (inlaid) technique, while the rectangular panels along the sides are each decorated with larger bone inlaid to form a complex geometric pattern. The plaques have been arranged onto a late nineteenth century wooden panel.
Üslup Mamluk Egypt (Islamic)
Victoria and Albert Museum - موتور جستجوی نسخه های خطی عثمانی
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