NASHVILLE, TN.- This fall, the
Frist Center for the Visual Arts presents Ink, Silk, and Gold: Islamic Art from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, a dazzling display of the museums finest examples of Islamic art, which it has been collecting for more than 130 years. The exhibition spans chronologically from the eighth century to the present and geographically from Spain to Indonesia. Ink, Silk, and Gold will be on view at the Frist Centerits first stop on a highly anticipated tourfrom October 9, 2015, through January 10, 2016, and is the Frist Centers first survey of Islamic art. The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue written by an international team of scholars and marks the first time that highlights from the MFA Bostons Islamic art collection have been comprehensively studied, restored, and presented to the public.
The exhibition consists of nearly 100 objects, including Islamic manuscripts, brocaded velvets, gilded glass, luster-painted ceramics, monumental carpets, and silver inlaid metalwork. Ink, Silk, and Gold takes us on a spectacular journey through the Islamic world and serves as an excellent introduction to the history of Islamic art, says Frist Center Curator Trinita Kennedy. We have an exciting opportunity to open doors for visitors unfamiliar with the splendor of Islamic artistic traditions, and hope that our local Muslim community will take pride in seeing these extraordinary works on display in our galleries.
Organized chronologically and regionally, Ink, Silk, and Gold introduces visitors to the dynamism and complexity of Islamic art, and, as the exhibition title indicates, there is a special focus on physical aspects of the objectsthe colors, materials, shapes, and techniques used to make them. Certain works of art will be marked with an emblem to indicate a particularly interesting use of ink, silk, or gold, and the entrance to the galleries will be embellished with portals evoking traditional Islamic archways.
The first centuries of Islam were filled with political and territorial shifts, and with each conquest came the absorption of sophisticated, foreign artistic practices. From the 11th to the 15th centuries, the Islamic world began breaking into individual kingdoms and establishing strong regional traditions. The exhibition includes examples of objects from these disparate regions, while also highlighting common elements. Mirroring the historical convergence of the three major Islamic empires in the 16th to 18th centuries, objects are grouped under sections for the Ottoman Empire, Safavid Iran, and the Mughal Dynasty.
Throughout the history of Islam, its followers have created and used objects of exceptional beauty in both religious and secular contexts. It is clear that art has long been a source of visual and intellectual pleasures and gratification in the Islamic world, says Ms. Kennedy. Art has also been used to display wealth, status, and good taste. It is not just Qurans that are illuminated and mosques and palaces that are exquisitely outfitted. Even everyday objects, such as drinking glasses, bowls, and coats, are often rendered in luxurious materials. Beauty permeates every aspect of life and reflects the extraordinary sophistication and refinement of Islamic culture, especially Islamic court culture. The ornate decorative motifs of the tile lunette from Turkey and the door from Egypt, both pictured here, exemplify this tradition.
Exhibition highlights include a folio from the early medieval Blue Quran, one of the most lavish Quran manuscripts ever produced and one of the most famous works of Islamic calligraphy. The Blue Quran demonstrates the fundamental significance of writing and the art of the book in Islamic art, says Ms. Kennedy. The gold script appears to dance across the page. Other highlights include a folio from the Great Mongol Shahnama (Book of Kings); a drawing signed by the renowned Persian miniaturist Riza ʿAbbasi; a folio from the Late Shah Jahan Album; and the Ames carpet, one of the finest of all Mughal hunting carpets.
Islamic traditions and ideas continue to inspire the creativity of artists today. It is quite rare to see historical and contemporary Islamic art together in the same exhibition, and the fact that Ink, Silk, and Gold brings the story up to the present day is one of its many strengths, notes Ms. Kennedy. Four contemporary Muslim artists are represented, including Shahzia Sikander. Like the Blue Quran, Sikanders Pathology of Suspension #6 (2003) has a rich chromatic background, calligraphic lines and extraordinary attention to detail. There are many exciting connections between the earliest and most recent works of art on view, says Ms. Kennedy. Sikander learned the traditional art of miniature painting in Pakistan and now lives in New York. At more than six feet tall, her work brings the intimate format of Islamic manuscript illumination into conversation with monumental contemporary art of the West. By working on this grand scale, Sikander heightens our appreciation for the grace and intricacies of the smaller historical objects in the exhibition.