Welcome to Academy of Traditional Arts

The Academy of traditional Arts (ATA) aims to provide a network and platform for a broad range of traditional artists from all over the world.

We offer a wide range of short courses, which suit people with different levels of expertise, from beginners to professionals. ATA actively documents traditional arts and artists through interviewing, recording and photographing individuals and groups throughout the world about their studies, researches, ....   More ...

 

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Islamic Art in London - The V&A & the British Museum

Category
Lectures
Date
Tuesday, 23rd January 2018 00:00
Venue
Lunch in the William Morris room at the V&A - London

Two of Britain’s greatest museums provide a London treasure-house of Islamic works of art. The first is the V&A. One of its original aims, in 1852, was to inspire British designers and manufacturers. And its Islamic collections did just that, one of its most notable recipients being William de Morgan (1839-1917), the great lustre ceramicist.

Today, the Islamic gallery, focused on the famous Ardabil carpet, houses an awesome assemblage of Islamic works of art, including ceramics, tilework, metalwork, woodwork, glass, rock crystal, textiles and carpets. It also has a valuable educational group of cases which display the four elements so common in Islamic art – calligraphy, geometry, the arabesque (‘inspired by plants’), and figural art (‘images and poetry’). The day will start with these to form an initial understanding of Islamic art and what aesthetic or religious principles have helped to fashion it. Moving through the gallery, art and design are put into their Islamic cultural context, while enjoying the different designs displayed, particularly on carpets and textiles, as well as learning about individual pieces.

The British Museum’s Addis Gallery offers the visitor an incredibly rich collection of Islamic ceramics and metalwork, as well as some works of art on paper. The development of Islamic art in the different media is traced and the techniques explored which enabled them to evolve and develop, and to have such an impact on Italian Renaissance ceramics and design.

 
 

All Dates

  • Tuesday, 23rd January 2018 00:00

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