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This book investigates the interconnections between textile and
architecture via a variety of case studies from the Middle Ages
through the twentieth century and from diverse geographic contexts.
Among the oldest human technologies, building and weaving have
intertwined histories. Textile structures go back to Palaeolithic
times and are still in use today and textile furnishings have long
been used in interiors. Beyond its use as a material, textile has
offered a captivating model and metaphor for architecture through
its ability to enclose, tie together, weave, communicate, and
adorn. Recently, architects have shown a renewed interest in the
textile medium due to the use of computer-aided design, digital
fabrication, and innovative materials and engineering. The essays
edited and compiled here, work across disciplines to provide new
insights into the enduring relationship between textiles and
architecture. The contributors critically explore the spatial and
material qualities of textiles as well as cultural and political
significance of textile artifacts, patterns, and metaphors in
architecture. Textile in Architecture is organized into three
sections: "Ritual Spaces," which examines the role of textiles in
the formation and performance of socio-political, religious, and
civic rituals; "Public and Private Interiors" explores how textiles
transformed interiors corresponding to changing aesthetics,
cultural values, and material practices; and "Materiality and
Material Translations," which considers textile as metaphor and
model in the materiality of built environment. Including cases from
Morocco, Samoa, France, India, UK, Spain, the Ancient Andes and the
Ottoman Empire, this is essential reading for any student or
researcher interested in textiles in architecture through the ages.
This book investigates the interconnections between textile and
architecture via a variety of case studies from the Middle Ages
through the twentieth century and from diverse geographic contexts.
Among the oldest human technologies, building and weaving have
intertwined histories. Textile structures go back to Palaeolithic
times and are still in use today and textile furnishings have long
been used in interiors. Beyond its use as a material, textile has
offered a captivating model and metaphor for architecture through
its ability to enclose, tie together, weave, communicate, and
adorn. Recently, architects have shown a renewed interest in the
textile medium due to the use of computer-aided design, digital
fabrication, and innovative materials and engineering. The essays
edited and compiled here, work across disciplines to provide new
insights into the enduring relationship between textiles and
architecture. The contributors critically explore the spatial and
material qualities of textiles as well as cultural and political
significance of textile artifacts, patterns, and metaphors in
architecture. Textile in Architecture is organized into three
sections: "Ritual Spaces," which examines the role of textiles in
the formation and performance of socio-political, religious, and
civic rituals; "Public and Private Interiors" explores how textiles
transformed interiors corresponding to changing aesthetics,
cultural values, and material practices; and "Materiality and
Material Translations," which considers textile as metaphor and
model in the materiality of built environment. Including cases from
Morocco, Samoa, France, India, UK, Spain, the Ancient Andes and the
Ottoman Empire, this is essential reading for any student or
researcher interested in textiles in architecture through the ages.
In this book, Patricia Blessing explores the emergence of Ottoman
architecture in the fifteenth century and its connection with
broader geographical contexts. Analyzing how transregional exchange
shaped building practices, she examines how workers from Anatolia,
the Mediterranean, the Balkans, and Iran and Central Asia
participated in key construction projects. She also demonstrates
how drawn, scalable models on paper served as templates for
architectural decorations and supplemented collaborations that
involved the mobility of workers. Blessing reveals how the creation
of centralized workshops led to the emergence of a clearly defined
imperial Ottoman style by 1500, when the flexibility and
experimentation of the preceding century was levelled. Her book
radically transforms our understanding of Ottoman architecture by
exposing the diverse and fluid nature of its formative period. It
also provides the reader with an understanding of design, planning,
and construction processes of a major empire of the Islamic world.
This collection seeks to explore alternative definitions of bounded
identities, facilitating new approaches to spatial and
architectural forms. Taking as its starting point the emergence of
a new sense of ‘boundary’ emerged from the post-19th century
dissolution of large, heterogeneous empires into a mosaic of
nation-states in the Islamic world. This new sense of boundaries
has not only determined the ways in which we imagine and construct
the idea of modern citizenship, but also redefines relationships
between the nation, citizenship, cities and architecture. It brings
critical perspectives to our understanding of the interrelation
between the accumulated flows and the evolving concepts of boundary
in predominantly Muslim societies and within the global Muslim
diaspora. Essays in this book seeks to investigate how architecture
mediates the creation and deployment of boundaries and boundedness
that have been devised to define, enable, obstruct, accumulate
and/or control flows able to disrupt bounded territories or
identities. More generally, the book explores how architecture
might be considered as a means to understand the relationship
between flows and boundaries and its implication of defining modern
self. The essays in this volume collectively address how the
construction of self is primarily a spatial event and operated
within the crucial nexus of power-knowledge-space. Contributors
investigate how architecture mediates the creation and deployment
of boundaries and boundedness, how architecture might be considered
as a means to understand the relationship between flows and
boundaries and its implications for how we define the modern self.
  Part of the Critical Studies in Architecture of the
Middle East series.Â
Anatolia was home to a large number of polities in the medieval
period. Given its location at the geographical and chronological
juncture between Byzantines and the Ottomans, its story tends to be
read through the Seljuk experience. This obscures the multiple
experiences and spaces of Anatolia under the Byzantine empire,
Turko-Muslim dynasties contemporary to the Seljuks, the Mongol
llkhanids, and the various beyliks of eastern and western Anatolia.
This book looks beyond political structures and towards a
reconsideration of the interactions between the rural and the
urban; an analysis of the relationships between architecture,
culture and power; and an examination of the region's multiple
geographies. In order to expand historiographical perspectives it
draws on a wide variety of sources (architectural, artistic,
documentary and literary), including texts composed in several
languages (Arabic, Armenian, Byzantine Greek, Persian and Turkish).
This book is a study of Islamic architecture in Anatolia following
the Mongol conquest in 1243. Complex shifts in rule, movements of
population, and cultural transformations took place that affected
architecture on multiple levels. Beginning with the Mongol conquest
of Anatolia, and ending with the demise of the Ilkhanid Empire,
centered in Iran, in the 1330s, this book considers how the
integration of Anatolia into the Mongol world system transformed
architecture and patronage in the region. Traditionally, this
period has been studied within the larger narrative of a
progression from Seljuk to Ottoman rule and architecture, in a
historiography that privileges Turkish national identity. Once
Anatolia is studied within the framework of the Mongol Empire,
however, the region no longer appears as an isolated case; rather
it is integrated into a broader context beyond the modern borders
of Turkey, Iran, and the Caucasus republics. The monuments built
during this period served a number of purposes: mosques were places
of prayer and congregation, madrasas were used to teach Islamic law
and theology, and caravanserais secured trade routes for merchants
and travelers. This study analyzes architecture on multiple,
overlapping levels, based on a detailed observation of the
monuments. The layers of information extracted from the monuments
themselves, from written sources in Arabic, Persian, and Turkish,
and from historical photographs, shape an image of Islamic
architecture in medieval Anatolia that reflects the complexities of
this frontier region. New patrons emerged, craftsmen migrated
between neighboring regions, and the use of locally available
materials fostered the transformation of designs in ways that are
closely tied to specific places. Starting from these sources, this
book untangles the intertwined narratives of architecture, history,
and religion to provide a broader understanding of frontier culture
in the medieval Middle East, with its complex interaction of local,
regional, and trans-regional identities.
Anatolia was home to a large number of polities in the medieval
period. Given its location at the geographical and chronological
juncture between Byzantines and the Ottomans, its story tends to be
read through the Seljuk experience. This obscures the multiple
experiences and spaces of Anatolia under the Byzantine empire,
Turko-Muslim dynasties contemporary to the Seljuks, the Mongol
Ilkhanids, and the various beyliks of eastern and western Anatolia.
This book looks beyond political structures and towards a
reconsideration of the interactions between the rural and the
urban; an analysis of the relationships between architecture,
culture and power; and an examination of the region's multiple
geographies. In order to expand historiographical perspectives it
draws on a wide variety of sources (architectural, artistic,
documentary and literary), including texts composed in several
languages (Arabic, Armenian, Byzantine Greek, Persian and Turkish).
Original in its coverage of this period from the perspective of
multiple polities, religions and languages, this volume is also the
first to truly embrace the cultural complexity that was inherent in
the reality of daily life in medieval Anatolia and surrounding
regions.
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