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The hidden influence of Islamic art, from Cartier to William Morris

Throughout history, Islamic geometric patterns and arabesque designs have moved west, influencing everything from art to jewelry to home goods.

[Source photo: Anvita Gupta/Fast Company Middle East]

What is culture? In todayā€™s globalized world, we are familiar with seeing various cultural objects and ornamentation outside of their original location or context.

If culture is not fixed and bound to a particular location, how does culture move and transform?

Ornamentation in Islamic artā€”patternedĀ decoration or embellishment seen on objects or in architectureā€”is a great example of such movement of culture that can now be found across the world.

Throughout the centuries, Islamic geometric patternsĀ and arabesque (Islimi) designsā€”otherwise known as biomorphic, floral patternsā€”have moved from east to west.

These patterns have been built upon and adapted, and as such may not even be recognized as bearing the imprint or influence of Islamic societies.

What may appear to some viewers in certain contexts as a quintessentially British design, like patterning in William Morrisā€™s ā€˜Holland Parkā€™ carpet, it is actually inspired by Islamic arabeseque (Islimi) ornamentation. [Photo: Sepia Times/Getty Images]

ISLAMIC ART INFLUENCE ON WESTERN DESIGN

A recent exhibition,Ā Cartier and Islamic Art: In Search of Modernity, atĀ MusĆ©e des Arts dĆ©coratifsĀ in Paris showcases the influence of Islamic art on the designs of French jewelryĀ designer Maison Cartier. For example, theĀ 19th century English designer William Morrisā€”renowned for patterning that became known in fabrics, furniture and otherĀ Arts and Crafts movementĀ decorative artsā€”was inspired by the biomorphic floral designs of the Islamic arabesque (Islimi) ornamentation.

ā€˜CULTURAL TRANSLATIONā€™

Part of the reason for this movement of culture is the mobility of people and the portability of ornamental objects.

The notion of ā€œcultural translation,ā€ coined byĀ cultural theorist Homi K. Bhabha, is the act of translation, which is neither one cultural tradition nor the other cultural tradition, but is the emergence of other positions. The root of the English word translation is fromĀ the LatinĀ translatusĀ meaning ā€œto carry overā€ or ā€œto bring across.ā€

Movement resulting from migration gives rise to peopleā€™s acts of cultural translation. Translation is the negotiation arising from encounters of two social groups with different cultural traditions.

For Bhabha, cultural difference is never a finished ā€œthing.ā€ Migrant experiences exist at the borders or edges of different cultures and are in flux. Consequently, peopleā€™s acts of translating language or visual signs and symbols is an act of constant negotiation between cultures.

In this process, the migrantā€™s struggle operates in a process of transformation in the in-between space of culturesĀ called the third space. The third space is a hybrid space of negotiating cultural interactions.

MUSLIM ARTISTS IN DIASPORA

A good example of these kinds of cultural negotiations happens in the works of contemporary artists from culturally diverse backgrounds living in the western societies (in diaspora).

For Muslim artists in diaspora, traditional Islamic art forms contextualize their connections to their cultural backgrounds within broader social, political and cultural concernsā€”concerns like migration, cultural identity and diversity.

Pakistani Canadian artistĀ Tazeen QayyumĀ uses the language of the traditional Islamic ornamentation in her work such asĀ A Holding Pattern (2013) in order to investigate what it means to live between two cultures.

Upon first glance, the viewer perceives an aesthetically pleasing geometric design reminiscent of arabesque tile works in Islamic architecture. However, a closer inspection reveals that the ornamental pattern is a repetition of cockroachesā€™ silhouettes.

In a recent article forĀ BlackFlashĀ magazine, Qayyum explains this work:

ā€œI also intricately painted a set of airport lounge chairs representative of the liminal space of an airport, where migrants and refugees are neither here nor there but instead wait for clearance upon arrival at Pearson Airport. The title ā€˜holding patternā€™ solidifies this thinking as it connotes an aircraft awaiting clearance to land. It is a state of waiting that references my own displaced identity of living between two cultures, always in transit and never truly at home.ā€

ā€˜IN-BETWEEN SPACEā€™

Contemporary cultural theorists,Ā such as Sara Ahmed and Bhabha have argued that such artists enter a mode of cultural translation.

What do you see in this gold connective pattern etched over geese and mallards? [Photo: Soheila Esfahani]

Artists destabilize the idea of a monolithic culture and instead construct works that are influenced by locations of cultures that reflect an ā€œin-between spaceā€: a site of dialogue reflecting these interconnected influences.I recently created artwork in which I investigate cultural translation and question displacement, dissemination and reinsertion of culture by re-contextualizing culturally specific ornamentation. This work is for a three-person exhibition,Ā The Art of Living: On Community, Immigration, and the Migration of Symbols, Jude Abu Zaineh, Soheila Esfahani, Xiaojing Yan, curated by Catherine BĆ©dard, at the Canadian Cultural Centre in Paris, opening this month.

In my workĀ Mallards Reeds, a vintage wooden sign depicting a flock of Canada geese and mallards flying over a marsh at sunset has been laser-etched with an arabesque pattern.

By placing the arabesque design on the wood cutout of Canada geese and mallardsā€”a vintage ā€œCanadianaā€ objectā€”I aim to question the origin of culture and the role of ornamentation. I acquired this object at a local company where I live in Waterloo Region, Ontario, that salvages and reclaims wood materials. At one time, the sign apparently hung at a restaurant.

EXPERIENCES, CULTURES INFORM READINGS

As art historian Oleg Grabar notesĀ in his bookĀ The Mediation of Ornament: ā€ ā€¦ ornament is the ultimate mediator, paradoxically questioning the value of meanings by channeling them into pleasure. Or is it possible to argue instead that by providing pleasure, ornament also gives to the observer the right and the freedom to choose meaning?ā€

My work aims to become a mediator allowing the viewer to enter the third space and hinges on an act of negotiation. The viewersā€™ unique experiences and cultures inform their reading of the work. This allows them to ā€œenter the third spaceā€ by engaging in cultural translation: viewers carry their culture across and onto the work of art and vice versa.

I am interested in the notion of the third space not only in contemporary art/culture, but also as a means of opening a space of dialogue across fields of study in order to mobilize multiple perspectives.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Soheila Kolahdouz Esfahani is an Assistant Professor at the Visual Arts Department at Western University. More

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