Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Art treatments & subjects > Iconography, subjects depicted in art > Religious subjects depicted in art
|
Buy Now
The Image Debate - Figural representation in Islam and across the world (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,926
Discovery Miles 19 260
|
|
The Image Debate - Figural representation in Islam and across the world (Hardcover)
Series: Art History and Architecture
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
|
The images released by Islamic State of militants smashing statues
at ancient sites were a horrifying aspect of their advance across
Northern Iraq and Syria during 2015-16. Their leaders justified
this iconoclasm (destruction of images) by arguing that such
actions were divinely decreed in Islam, a notion that has remained
fixed in the public consciousness. The Image Debate: Figural
Representation in Islam and Across the World is a collection of
thirteen essays which examine the controversy surrounding the use
of images in Islamic and other religious cultures and seek to
redress some of the misunderstandings that have arisen. Written by
leading academics from the United States, Australia, Turkey, Israel
and the United Kingdom, the book has a foreword by Stefano Carboni,
Director of the Art Gallery of Western Australia, followed by an
introduction by the editor Christiane Gruber, who sets the subject
in context with a detailed examination of the debates over idols
and the production of figural images in Islamic traditions. Twelve
further articles are divided into three sections: the first deals
with pre-modern Islam: Mika Natif looks at tensions between the
Hadith prohibition on images and the praxis of image-making under
the Umayyad dynasty and argues that the Umayyad rulers used imagery
to establish their political and religious authority; Finbarr Barry
Flood examines the practice of epigraphic erasure, i.e., the
removal of names of rulers and patrons from historical inscriptions
from the medieval Islamic world; and Oya Pancaroglu focuses on the
figural conventions of an illustrated manuscript of Varqa and
Gulshah, a medieval Persian romance composed in the masnavi
(rhyming couplet) form by the 11th-century poet `Ayyuqi. The second
section addresses the situation outside Islam: Alicia Walker
surveys attitudes toward the production and veneration of religious
images in Byzantium from the earliest years of the Christian Roman
Empire (early 4th century) to the aftermath of the Iconoclast
controversy (late 9th century); Steven Fine explores the history of
Jewish engagement with `art' from Roman antiquity through the high
middle ages through a detailed exploration of the 3rd-century Dura
Europos synagogue and its wall paintings; Michael Shenkar examines
evidence for the employment of figural images in the cultic
practices of some of the major ancient Iranian cultural and
political entities, offering a broad perspective on perceptions of
images in ancient Iranian worship; and Robert DeCaroli delves into
the question of why no image of the Buddha was made during the
first five hundred years of Buddhism. The third section brings the
reader back to Islamic lands with five articles examining aspects
of the issue in the modern and contemporary periods: Yousuf Saaed
investigates South Asian mass-produced images, especially posters
that include illustrations of local Sufi shrines, portraits of
saints and Shi`i iconography; James Bennett explores the visual
depiction of Javanese shadow puppets (wayang kulit), including the
sage Begawan Abiyasa, whose narratives convey key elements of Sufi
mystical philosophy; Allen and Mary Roberts consider images of
Cheikh Amadu Bamba, the founding Sufi saint of the Senegalese
Mouride order; Rose Issa addresses how the term `Islamic' relates
to contemporary art, how artists manage to create work in countries
in constant turmoil and to what extent such works reflect their
conceptual, aesthetic, and socio-political concerns; and finally
Shiva Balaghi traces the use of the figure, along its symbolic
shadows and silhouettes, in works by notable Iranian artists living
in Iran and in diaspora.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!
|
You might also like..
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.