Book contents
- What is “Islamic” Art?
- What is “Islamic” Art?
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Color Plates
- Preface
- Note on Transcultural Communication
- Introduction From Islamic Art to Perceptual Culture
- 1 The Islamic Image
- Chapter 2 Seeing with the Ear
- Chapter 3 The Insufficient Image
- Chapter 4 Seeing with the Heart
- Chapter 5 Seeing through the Mirror
- Chapter 6 Deceiving Deception
- Chapter 7 The Transcendent Image
- Chapter 8 The Transgressive Image
- Chapter 9 Mimetic Geometries
- Chapter 10 Perspectives on Perspective
- Conclusion Out of Perspective
- References
- Index
- Plate Section (PDF Only)
Chapter 7 - The Transcendent Image
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 September 2019
- What is “Islamic” Art?
- What is “Islamic” Art?
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Color Plates
- Preface
- Note on Transcultural Communication
- Introduction From Islamic Art to Perceptual Culture
- 1 The Islamic Image
- Chapter 2 Seeing with the Ear
- Chapter 3 The Insufficient Image
- Chapter 4 Seeing with the Heart
- Chapter 5 Seeing through the Mirror
- Chapter 6 Deceiving Deception
- Chapter 7 The Transcendent Image
- Chapter 8 The Transgressive Image
- Chapter 9 Mimetic Geometries
- Chapter 10 Perspectives on Perspective
- Conclusion Out of Perspective
- References
- Index
- Plate Section (PDF Only)
Summary
Chapter 7 explores the ephemeral image, transcended on the journey to truth. Emphasis on inward mimesis and perception through spiritual training shifts the art-historical emphasis on material objects toward a recognition of the importance of dreams, visions, and dematerializing images in Islamic discourses. The similar functions of the trope of the image and the dream image underscore their functional interchangeability as well as the reality often ascribed to dreams and visions over materiality. This emerges in uses of the image as identification; in Prophetic visions proving his miraculous journeys; ibn Arabi’s interpretation of sleep as a metaphor for exile in the Quranic parable of the Cave of the Seven Sleepers; and in the theorization of sleep and dreams as enabling an interface with reality impossible in the waking or material world. The resulting valorization of meaning over matter suggests a mode of preservation rooted in ideas rather than physical forms, accepted as inevitably perishable. Similar tropes of the image in Nizami’s Shirin and Khosrau, and Rumi’s story of the Three Princes, suggest that the image should be approached with neither love nor hate, but with indifference.
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- Information
- What is 'Islamic' Art?Between Religion and Perception, pp. 184 - 222Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019