CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts — An exhibition on the Harvard Artwork Museums is an tour from Europe to components eastward, vacation spot Istanbul, capital of the Ottoman Empire, with aspect journeys to the Safavid (Iran) and Mughal (India) domains. Fairly than an immersive expertise, Think about Me and You: Dutch and Flemish Encounters with the Islamic World, 1450–1750 encourages quiet contemplation of juxtapositions and diversifications, generalized tropes and nuanced interpretations.
This odyssey is made visible within the monumental, 16-foot woodcut “Customs and Fashions of the Turks” (1553) by Pieter Coecke van Aelst, an artist whose one-person present on the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork in 2014 induced a minor sensation with its grand tapestries and small-scale paper artwork. We comply with Coecke from Antwerp to Istanbul in 1533 in richly detailed scenes, from treacherous mountains to the Roman, Egyptian, and Muslim monuments of the town the place Sultan Süleyman, known as “the Lawgiver” and “the Magnificent,” presides. Traversing Slavonia and Macedonia (present-day Croatia and northern Greece) to Istanbul, Coecke camps with troopers within the mountains, picnics with different vacationers, and watches funeral processions and circumcision ceremonies.
As customary for artists who made such a visit, Coecke belonged to a diplomatic mission to the Ottoman court docket led by the Habsburg ambassador Cornelis de Schepper, with the first function of furthering commerce. Conferences occurred between ambassadors and rulers, vacationers and retailers, artists and their topics. From materials and visible data, we will speculate on the amount of transactions that befell. Luxurious items have been purchased and offered, amongst them textiles and tulip bulbs, each magnificently displayed right here. A cushioned pillow and a prayer carpet are put in to point their authentic perform. A carpet protecting a Dutch desk signifies its use in Amsterdam.
Guests are invited to think about the diminutive lady fortunate sufficient to put on a luxurious silk velvet gown with silver and gold-threaded floral designs. By no means earlier than exhibited, its metallic threads glow. Much less inviting are the bridal footwear of wooden, shell, leather-based, and glass with precariously excessive platforms; these saved ft dry on a moist ground in a shower and made the bride taller, however required two attendants to maintain her upright.
Europeans recorded the visiting dignitaries from overseas, as in Aegidius Sadeler’s engravings of the Safavid ambassadors to the Prague court docket, and Ottoman artists’ portrayal of European rulers, often based mostly on intermediate portraits. The Turkish naval captain and poet Haydar Reis made watercolor portraits of rulers and well-known males comparable to Italian doctor and historian Paolo Giovio. In “Francis I, King of France” (1566–74), after a c. 1530 work by painter Jean Clouet, he translated the black beret and white plume of his supply right into a trim hat with floppy feather; he discarded Clouet’s suspiciously smiling eyes, and mouth for a distant gaze and pursed lips beneath a crooked mustache and enlarged the neck to an enormous measurement. Whereas retaining the recognizable traits of his mannequin, Reis reworked the textured volumes of Francis’s clothes into forceful flat areas of colour with delicate trim.
By the sixteenth century, the tulip, native to central Asia, was treasured by the Ottomans, who featured it in gardens and ornamental patterns. Visiting Europeans introduced bulbs to Vienna and botanist Carolus Clusius famously propagated the plant in Leiden within the Netherlands. Tulipmania ensued, and watercolors as data for house owners and sellers turned a specialty; 10 sheets present superb purple-, red-, and yellow-streaked blooms. The Dutch cultivars have been prized as diplomatic items: In 1612, for example, “200 bulbs of the perfect tulips” have been among the many items from the primary ambassador of the Dutch Republic, Cornelis Haga, to Sultan Ahmed I, in keeping with the press supplies. The trim, tight-pointed petals of Ottoman renditions bear little resemblance to the feathery hybridized Dutch tulips, however they have been equally appreciated.
For the Europeans, the turban signified the Easterner, North African, pagan, and easily international. Accordingly, representations of the Adoration of the Magi, the Crucifixion, and different biblical scenes gave turbans to these from the Holy Land and afar. In historical histories, opponents of the Romans wore turbans, as did Hannibal’s military. As seen in Jacob Matham’s c. 1595 copy on this exhibition, Tintoretto gave turbans to the non-Christian onlookers in Provence, France, who witness St. Mark’s rescue of the tortured Christian slave by his grasp. Accuracy was not an element of their evocations of distance in time and place.
One caveat of this exhibition is that Dutch and Flemish artists outnumber their Islamic counterparts. However Think about Me and You subtly factors out kinships, mutual curiosities, and distinctions within the encounters between these two areas.
Think about Me and You: Dutch and Flemish Encounters with the Islamic World, 1450–1750 continues at Harvard Artwork Museums by way of August 18. The exhibition was organized by Talitha Maria G. Schepers.