Charting the fascinating history of cultural and artistic
interactions between East and West, this exhibition explores the impact the
Islamic world has had on Western art for centuries.
Our newly announced special autumn exhibition looks at how artists
and craftspeople from Europe and North America were inspired by – and
represented – the Islamic world, especially the Middle East and North Africa.
Exhibition co-curators Julia Tugwell and Olivia Threlkeld give a brief
introduction to how this artistic interplay continues to stretch across the
world and connect cultures.
Artistic exchange between East and West has a long and intertwined
history, and the exhibition picks these stories up from the 15th century,
following cultural interactions that can still be felt today. Objects from
Europe, North America, the Middle East and North Africa highlight a
centuries-old tradition of influence and exchange from East to West. The
diverse selection of objects includes ceramics, photography, glass, jewellery
and clothing, as well as contemporary art, showcasing how artistic exchange influenced
a variety of visual and decorative arts. The exhibition concludes with a
21st-century perspective, through the eyes of four female artists from the
Middle East and North Africa who continue to question and subvert the idea of
Orientalism in their work and explore the subject of Muslim female identity.
The show takes a deeper look at the art movement of ‘Orientalism’ –
specifically the way in which North Africa and the Middle East were represented
as lands of beauty and intrigue, especially in European and North American art.
Often blurring the lines between fantasy and reality, Orientalist art reached
its heyday in the mid-1800s, as Europeans and North Americans were looking
overseas to fundamentally learn more about other cultures, but its popularity
had faded by the 1940s with the decline of the British Empire.
Conceived and developed in collaboration with the Islamic Arts
Museum Malaysia, Inspired by the East: how the Islamic world influenced Western
art includes generous loans from their extensive collection of Islamic and
Orientalist art. The exhibition and collaboration highlight centuries of
cultural exchange between East and West and its continuing importance today. It
will go on display at the Islamic Arts Museum Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, from 20
June to 20 October 2020. Find out more about the collaboration and the
exhibition in Malaysia here.
https://blog.britishmuseum.org/how-did-the-islamic-world-influence-western-art/?_ga=2.85298329.1680318892.1569923384-1899094807.1569749577
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