Worldwide Locations
Worldwide Locations
Worldwide Locations
Worldwide Locations
The visual arts allows us to understand people of earlier eras: visual literacy reveals many things about
what these people did, knew, and believed. Examining the geometric
patterns that characterize so much of Islamic art can provide students
with important insights into the technology, scientific knowledge, and
religious beliefs of Muslims. Appreciation for a basic relationship
between the art and the religion of Islam increases with familiarity.
Careful observation of the illustrations here will provide an
introduction to Islamic religious beliefs through its art.
Geometric motifs were popular with Muslim artists and designers in all
parts of the world, at all times, and for decorating every surface,
whether walls or floors, pots or lamps, book covers or textiles. As
Islam spread from nation to nation and region to region, artists
combined their penchant for geometry with pre-existing traditions,
creating a new and distinctive Islamic art. This art expressed the
logic and order inherent in the Islamic vision of the universe.
Although the shapes and structures are based on the geometry of Euclid
and other Greek mathematicians, Islamic artists used them to create
visual statements about religious ideas. One explanation of this
practice was that Mohammad had warned against the worship of idols;
this prohibition was understood as a commandment against representation
of human or animal forms. Geometric forms were an acceptable substitute
for the proscribed forms.
An even more important reason is that geometric systems and Islamic
religious values, though expressed in different forms, say similar
things about universal values. In Islamic art, infinitely repeating
patterns represent the unchanging laws of God. Muslims are expected to
observe strict rules of behavior exactly as they were orginally set
forth by Mohammad in the seventh century. These rules are known as the
"Pillars of Faith":
Copyright 1998.
Author: Jane Norman.
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