اینو دیدی

مرجع دانلود فایل ,تحقیق , پروژه , پایان نامه , فایل فلش گوشی

اینو دیدی

مرجع دانلود فایل ,تحقیق , پروژه , پایان نامه , فایل فلش گوشی

تحقیق و بررسی در مورد سایت علمی پژوهشی فرش ایرا1

اختصاصی از اینو دیدی تحقیق و بررسی در مورد سایت علمی پژوهشی فرش ایرا1 دانلود با لینک مستقیم و پر سرعت .

لینک دانلود و خرید پایین توضیحات

فرمت فایل word  و قابل ویرایش و پرینت

تعداد صفحات: 17

 

 

سایت علمی پژوهشی فرش ایران

 

[ رویدادها ][ تماس ] [ درباره ما ] [تریبون آزاد دانشگاه] [ تالار بحث]

 

English

Rugs in Orientalist paintings

مقالات فرش

 

صنایع دستی

 

هنر و فرهنگ

 

هنر و فلسفه

 

اقتصاد و تجارت

 

مقالات لاتین

 

موضوعات آزاد

 

گزارشات تصویری

 

اگر تمایل به ارسال مقاله و یا خبر به پایگاه علمی پژوهشی فرش ایران دارید میتوانید مطلب خود را به صورت فایل   WORD برای سایت ارسال کنید .

info@rugart.org

این مطلب را برای دوستتان بفرستید.

نظر تخصصی شما

نسخه قابل چاپ

Boncompagni

استاد راهنما:

ناشر:turkotek.com

تاریخ نشر:(17/آذر/1384)

Rugs in Orientalist paintings

by Filiberto Boncompagni

 

Among my few books on rug I have one by Jon Thompson: "Carpets From the Tents, Cottages, and Workshops of Asia." Most of you will surely know it, although it has different editions and slightly different titles. 

It is an interesting book with nice photos, some of which are of old paintings with Oriental rugs.The one that attracted mostly my attention is "A carpet sale in Cairo", a watercolor by the British painter Charles Robertson (1844-91). As Thompson notes, it "portrays a number of identifiable carpets, including three Caucasians, a Turkish flatwoven  prayer rug and an Uzbeq embroidery hanging over the balcony." 

Charles Robertson, A Carpet Sale

 

I have been living in the Middle East for several years now, including three in Cairo. Since then I had the occasion to visit several houses, public buildings and so on and I became convinced  that the appreciation for Caucasian rugs - or anyway for textiles with bold tribal-like geometrical design - was confined mostly to Westerners. Locals here tend to prefer the Arabesque style,  the floral, curvilinear design of workshop rug production.So, how comes Robertson’s painting showed so many Caucasians in 19th century Cairo?As Thompson notes, the nineteenth century saw an increasing interest, in the West, for oriental rugs. Merchants "brought their wares to the trading centres such as Bukhara, Shiraz, Mashhad, Tabriz  and Tiflis, from where they were transported in bales by camels, mostly to Constantinople, as it was called at the time, and then shipped to the west…"Very often paintings of that time showed Western interiors adorned with "a rug or carpet,  usually a tribal or village weaving from the Middle East".Tribal or village… that means, among other things, Caucasian. And the last quarter of 19th C  saw also the arrival of Caucasian rugs on the Western market, where they encountered a very good appreciation.In the M.E. rugs and carpets have always been used as home furnishing. This is a long established tradition, so I do not think that the "Oriental rug customer" was influenced by the western fashion at the time.On the other hand, the center of rug trade was Istanbul, the capital of the Ottoman Empire…And the Middle East was largely part of that - albeit slowly fading -  Empire… So, the main rug source for most of the Near East and the West was the same.Thompson adds also: "Nineteenth-century painting, potentially a rich source of information, has yet to be explored."That gave me the idea of making a little research on oriental rugs in Orientalist paintings. My resources are quite limited: a couple of books and the web, and do I not pretend by any means to have performed a comprehensive investigation. The idea is rather to present a few facts and paintings and stimulate  a discussion on the subject.First of all it is better to make clear that Orientalism in painting doesn’t correspond to a particular style. It’s rather a theme crossing different painting movements of 19th century until the beginning of the 20th. The Orientalists  were travelers, they visited the Orient and their paintings were the result of their experiences. (To be precise, Orientalism encompasses other arts and disciplines, including politics, but this is another matter.)There were even "Orientalist" painters who never traveled and painted oriental subjects of pure invention. Here we’ll discuss only about those "traveler" painters.A word on technique. The oil technique requires time. In most cases the artists used to make sketches or watercolors on the spot and then make the oil paintings in their studios, often using professional models, once they returned at home.For example Delacroix, during his only "oriental" travel (Spain, and Morocco) filled seven notebooks with sketches and notes that he used upon his return to Paris for the next 30 years…I’m going to present a few pictures. What I’d like to hear from you is:- how much do you grade, in terms of percentage, the truthfulness of a painting, with 100% meaning the painting is a faithful reproduction of a real-life Oriental scene and 0% the painting is pure "artistic" invention.- identification of the rugs in the painting and incidental comments and opinions on them (or anything else, if you like).I’ll start with two artists. Others will follow in the next weeks.Charles Robertson (1844-1891) : Member of  Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolour and of the Royal Society of Painters, Etchers and Engravers. I found out that he made frequent and long travels in the Orient but no more details.He worked exclusively with oil until 1880, and exclusively with watercolors after 1884, so I guess that between 1880 and 1884 he used both techniques.

Charles Robertson,  Carpet Bazaar, Cairo  watercolor (I think) dated 1887

Charles Robertson, A Carpet Sale  (again) watercolor, not dated and not situated.

Charles Robertson 1, detail of the above painting

 

Charles Robertson 2 detail of the same 

Charle Robertson 3 detail of the same 

 

Charles Robertson 4 detail of the same

 Charles Robertson The Bazaar Khan El Khaleelee Cairo watercolor,  signed and situated on old label.

 

CharlesRobertson detail of the above 

Jean-Léon Gérôme(1824-1904) was one of the most famous Orientalists.On page 35 of Kaffel’s "Caucasian Prayer Rugs" there is a reproduction of his Veiled Circassian Lady (c. 1876). I love this painting.

In 1854 Gérôme made a journey to Turkey  and in 1857 visited Egypt where he spent eight months.He later visited also Palestine, Greece, Spain, Italy, Algiers and again Egypt.Among Gérôme’s travel companions it was the sculptor Frederic Bartholdi (the creator of the Statue of Liberty) who took a camera along, as well as the necessary apparatus for developing, and shot some very early travel photographs. Gérôme probably kept some of Bartholdi's photos for his own use. He was indeed reputed for his photographic style: the important French critic Theophile Gautier wrote a lengthy article about Gérôme's aid of photography. (See also footnote on photography).250 of his nearly 600 paintings had an Orientalist subject.

 

He was also reputed for paintings of historical  subjects: pure "studio" products.Like several other Orientalists, Gérôme used to collect oriental objects like rugs, fabrics, costumes, furniture, metalwork and arms using them in his studio.

Gérôme, Harem Pool

Gérôme, Harem Pool detail

Gérôme,Prayer on the Housetops


دانلود با لینک مستقیم


تحقیق و بررسی در مورد سایت علمی پژوهشی فرش ایرا1