Author: Carboni, Stefano

The legacy of Genghis Khan : courtly art and culture in western Asia, 1256-1353
Date2002
Publish_locationNew York
PublisherMetropolitan Museum of Art
CollectionRicci Institute Library [ASCC]
Edition
LanguageEnglish
Record_typeBook (Exhibition catalog), Exhibition catalog (pdf)
Series
ShelfStacks, Digital Archives
Call NumberN7283.L44 2002
Descriptionxiv, 322 p. : color ill., maps (some col.) ; 31 cm. + pdf
Note

The legacy of Genghis Khan : courtly art and culture in western Asia, 1256-1353 / edited by Linda Komaroff and Stefano Carboni.
Catalog of an exhibition held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Nov. 5, 2002-Feb. 16, 2003, and at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Apr. 13-July 27, 2003.
Printing: [New Haven. Distributed by Yale University Press]
Includes bibliographical references (pages 289-308) and index.

The Mongols and their legacy / Morris Rossabi -- The Mongols in Iran / Charles Melville -- A note on artistic exchanges in the Mongol empire / James C.Y. Watt -- Ilkhanid courtly life / Tomoko Masuya -- The religious art of the Ilkhanids / Sheila Blair -- The arts of the book in Ilkhanid Iran / Robert Hillenbrand -- The transmission and dissemination of a new visual language / Linda Komaroff -- Synthesis: continuity and innovation in Ilkhanid art / Stefano Carboni -- Technical study 1: close examination of leaves from the great Mongol / Shahnama Sarah Bertalan -- Technical study 2: the glazed press-molded tiles of Takht-i Sulaiman / John Hirx, Marco Leona, and Pieter Meyers.

"Under the leadership of Genghis Khan, nomadic horsemen burst out of Mongolia in the thirteenth century and began their sweep across Asia, creating the largest empire the world has ever known. Particularly in Iran and China, the results were far-reaching: the Mongols imposed enormous changes but at the same time were profoundly influenced by the highly developed civilizations of their new subjects. Greater Iran was ruled for a century (1256-1353) by the Mongol dynasty known as the Ilkhanids. These Mongol masters first opposed and then enthusiastically adopted Islam. They became sponsors of a brilliant cultural flowering that encompassed the writing of histories, city-building, and many branches of the arts.

Local Persian artistic traditions were themselves transformed by Mongol preferences and by contracts with the arts of Europe and especially China, as wares and craftsmen from China and Iran traveled back forth across the empire." "More than two hundred outstanding objects exemplifying all these branches of the arts are illustrated in color and fully described in this catalogue. Eight distinguished scholars in the field present the historical and political background of the Ilkhanid era and address such subjects as manuscript illustration, religious art, and the transmission of design motifs across Asia. Also included are two technical studies, maps, a genealogical chart, and a complete bibliography."--Jacket.

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SubjectMongols--History To 1500 Genghis Khan 成吉思汗, 1162-1227 Art, Ilkhanid--Iran--Exhibitions Islamic art--Iran--Exhibitions Art, Ilkhanid--Middle East--Exhibitions Islamic art--Middle East--Exhibitions Mongols--Iran--History--Exhibitions
ISBN0300096917 ; 9780300096910
LCCN2002027893