The document summarizes an effort by the Montreal Oriental Rug Society to engage younger generations with traditional textiles. They held an exhibition featuring antique Anatolian rugs and asked university students to creatively respond through artwork, writing, or other mediums. The goal was to draw students into the cultural richness of traditional textiles while allowing them freedom in their responses. The students' work is compiled in a catalog, excerpts of which are presented in the document, showing diverse responses from video interviews to analysis to creative writing inspired by the rugs.
A group of students and faculty at Dawson College in Montreal were invited to respond creatively to images of antique Anatolian rugs from the collection of the Montreal Oriental Rug Society. Their responses were featured in an exhibition and catalog. Two cinema students created a documentary interviewing a rug dealer. A literature student wrote about the "Holbein motif" seen on the catalog cover rug, tracing its origins and depictions in Renaissance paintings. The rug motif represented the rise of trade and capital in Europe that fueled Renaissance achievements.
The document provides an overview of the "Clear Picture" art exhibit curated by students from Marquette University's Spanish and Journalism classes. It introduces the original curators of the exhibit, Eugenia Afinoguenova and Pamela Hill Nettleton, and the Haggerty Museum director who supported the project. It then shares personal statements from several students describing their experiences working on the exhibit and lessons learned. These statements highlight the challenges of deciding which artworks to include to best represent the theme of "community" and bringing together diverse viewpoints. The document aims to provide context and reactions to the collaborative student-curated exhibit.
Here are a few key points about Exodus:
- It is made from discarded clothes, fabric, shoes, bags, toys found in Harlem and flattened fire hose
- Ward arranged these materials into block-like formations
- The title Exodus references the biblical story but also demographic migrations to Harlem over time, with waves of immigrants from the southern US and Caribbean
- It comments on histories of movement and displacement while using everyday discarded items from the neighborhood
This document discusses various theories of art and the artworld through references to many artworks and thinkers. It examines institutional theories proposed by Arthur Danto, George Dickie, Nelson Goodman, and others which view art as defined by social conventions and institutions rather than inherent qualities. It also addresses debates around what constitutes an institution and how artworks act as world-makers. The document poses open questions about the nature and boundaries of art.
When is art now? This lecture will focus on definitions of Contemporary Art that focus on the experience of 'time', comparing and contrasting them with theories of contemporary art that hold it to be a (sub)culture, a genre, a period, or a style.
What does it mean to state that art is contemporary rather than to hold that it is modern, prescient, traditional, nostalgic, postmodern, ancient...?
What concepts of time do people need to develop and share in order to understand the contemporary?
Where and how is the temporality of the contemporary situated?
This lecture will outline some of the key ways in which art theory has attempted to approach such questions by introducing a few key concepts such as: supercessionism, presentism, contemporaneity, anachrony, polychrony and chronopolitics.
To illustrate how this works in practice, the lecture will examine the chronopolitics of the 2012 Documenta and 2013 Venice Biennale.
This document provides information about the exhibition "CityTales and CountryScapes" by South African artist Nelson Makamo. It includes acknowledgements, a foreword by David Koloane discussing the current South African art scene, and an essay by Portia Malatjie reflecting on Makamo's neo-figurative subjects. The bulk of the document is images of Makamo's artwork. Biographies of the contributors and information about the exhibition and catalogue teams are also included.
Color Wheelz is a custom designed van that travels to different neighborhoods in New York City, allowing visitors inside to manipulate colorful objects and create patterns representing the colors they see around them. The project aims to record differences and similarities in color usage across communities and provide a playful, participatory environment for exploring color. It is designed as a mobile installation that can engage people in as many locations as possible.
A group of students and faculty at Dawson College in Montreal were invited to respond creatively to images of antique Anatolian rugs from the collection of the Montreal Oriental Rug Society. Their responses were featured in an exhibition and catalog. Two cinema students created a documentary interviewing a rug dealer. A literature student wrote about the "Holbein motif" seen on the catalog cover rug, tracing its origins and depictions in Renaissance paintings. The rug motif represented the rise of trade and capital in Europe that fueled Renaissance achievements.
The document provides an overview of the "Clear Picture" art exhibit curated by students from Marquette University's Spanish and Journalism classes. It introduces the original curators of the exhibit, Eugenia Afinoguenova and Pamela Hill Nettleton, and the Haggerty Museum director who supported the project. It then shares personal statements from several students describing their experiences working on the exhibit and lessons learned. These statements highlight the challenges of deciding which artworks to include to best represent the theme of "community" and bringing together diverse viewpoints. The document aims to provide context and reactions to the collaborative student-curated exhibit.
Here are a few key points about Exodus:
- It is made from discarded clothes, fabric, shoes, bags, toys found in Harlem and flattened fire hose
- Ward arranged these materials into block-like formations
- The title Exodus references the biblical story but also demographic migrations to Harlem over time, with waves of immigrants from the southern US and Caribbean
- It comments on histories of movement and displacement while using everyday discarded items from the neighborhood
This document discusses various theories of art and the artworld through references to many artworks and thinkers. It examines institutional theories proposed by Arthur Danto, George Dickie, Nelson Goodman, and others which view art as defined by social conventions and institutions rather than inherent qualities. It also addresses debates around what constitutes an institution and how artworks act as world-makers. The document poses open questions about the nature and boundaries of art.
When is art now? This lecture will focus on definitions of Contemporary Art that focus on the experience of 'time', comparing and contrasting them with theories of contemporary art that hold it to be a (sub)culture, a genre, a period, or a style.
What does it mean to state that art is contemporary rather than to hold that it is modern, prescient, traditional, nostalgic, postmodern, ancient...?
What concepts of time do people need to develop and share in order to understand the contemporary?
Where and how is the temporality of the contemporary situated?
This lecture will outline some of the key ways in which art theory has attempted to approach such questions by introducing a few key concepts such as: supercessionism, presentism, contemporaneity, anachrony, polychrony and chronopolitics.
To illustrate how this works in practice, the lecture will examine the chronopolitics of the 2012 Documenta and 2013 Venice Biennale.
This document provides information about the exhibition "CityTales and CountryScapes" by South African artist Nelson Makamo. It includes acknowledgements, a foreword by David Koloane discussing the current South African art scene, and an essay by Portia Malatjie reflecting on Makamo's neo-figurative subjects. The bulk of the document is images of Makamo's artwork. Biographies of the contributors and information about the exhibition and catalogue teams are also included.
Color Wheelz is a custom designed van that travels to different neighborhoods in New York City, allowing visitors inside to manipulate colorful objects and create patterns representing the colors they see around them. The project aims to record differences and similarities in color usage across communities and provide a playful, participatory environment for exploring color. It is designed as a mobile installation that can engage people in as many locations as possible.
The document discusses Robert Stein's role as Deputy Director for Research, Technology, and Engagement at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. It provides details about Stein's background and experience in various roles at universities and museums. It also outlines the IMA's strategic plan, with a focus on establishing the museum as a leader in research areas like art history, conservation science, and visitor studies. The document advocates for an approach of audience engagement over education and discusses various models and theories around maximizing visitor experience.
The document discusses strategies for museums to cultivate meaningful engagement with cultural audiences through conversation and collaboration, examining how museums can move from being places that simply interpret cultural inheritance to becoming public squares that foster open discussions and welcome participation from visitors in interpreting artworks and cultural objects. It also explores how museums can optimize visitor experiences through approaches like identifying visitor motivations, providing interpretive materials focused on ideas, objects, or people, creating opportunities for flow states and epiphanies, and giving visitors a voice.
Merging Traditional "Uli" Painting Techniques/Symbols and Computer Graphicsikennaaghanya
For many in the South Eastern part of Nigeria, Digital Art is rapidly becoming the preferred medium to produce poster designs and digital paintings. With a mouse, appropriate software and hardware, monitor, a scanner and a laser printer, one can control a project from start to finish. Traditional “Uli” Body Painting techniques/symbols at the same time, are visual media, which the writer describes as static media (i.e. it can only show snapshots), but it can be enhanced by stylistic elements of a metalanguage to produce the visual impression of dynamics. The viewer's imagination is asked to interpret these symbols and to change the meaning of objects actually shown. “Uli” is an expression of the Ibo people’s capacity for creative body design, which is firmly rooted in their myths and their experience of life in the past, present and future. At its best, it is an expression of their synthetic present, the epic of their search for a new order in the contemporary world. Unfortunately, the “Uli” Traditional Body Painting technique is gradually fading away, as well as the use of the Uli symbols. The emphasis of this paper is to identify the advantages in merging the use of Digital Arts and “Uli” Traditional Body Painting techniques/symbols in producing social awareness themed painting/poster designs and sculptural pieces in Nigeria, with particular reference to the Ibo people of the South Eastern Region of Nigeria. This way, the poster/painting will not just serve as a communicative medium but also as a work of Art (in terms of its aesthetic qualities) and the Uli symbols can as well be preserved.
This document provides information about a course on identity, including contact details for the lecturer, class times, assessment details, and required readings and resources. Students are expected to submit their first assignment, an illustrated written piece on their identities, by March 15th. The document also shares examples of artworks addressing themes of self-portraits and identity, including works by Ema Tavola, Albrecht Dürer, Kazimir Malevich, and Frida Kahlo. Concepts around reflexive identity from sociologist Anthony Giddens are discussed.
This document provides strategies and resources for integrating art history into K-12 classrooms in an engaging way. It outlines goals of making art history relevant, engaging, and manageable for teachers. Key recommendations include examining artworks in context, looking for themes, being inclusive, and allowing student exploration. Short and long-term project ideas are presented to incorporate art history, such as having students act as travel agents or compose songs about artworks. Resources like SmartHistory and museum websites are also suggested.
The document discusses using the Yiwarra Kuju exhibition at the National Museum of Australia to teach students about Aboriginal art. It describes how the exhibition helped allay the students' fears of engaging with Aboriginal art by showing them art from the Western Desert that tells histories and stories in a way that is relatable to non-Aboriginal people. It details how the students were inspired by techniques used in the exhibition to create their own artworks telling stories of place and identity. Their collaborative artworks were exhibited, demonstrating how the Yiwarra Kuju exhibition facilitated cross-cultural understanding and inquiry-based learning about Aboriginal art.
Art appreciation is a general introduction to visual arts that is designed to create a deeper appreciation of the creative processes involved. It reviews two and three-dimensional art forms, methods, and media, examines visual elements and principles of design, and briefly surveys art styles from prehistoric to 20th century. The course is oriented towards students without formal study in these disciplines and serves as a beginning level class to familiarize students with different types of art and how to intelligently discuss art.
unfolding - Nan Tien Institute art exhibition
2 - 22 November 2012
12 IAVA artists explored the idea of unfolding in the context of Australian Artists in the Asian Century.
Artists: Kendal Heyes, Jennifer Jackson, Garry Jones, Alena Kennedy, Flossie Peitsch, Jennifer Portman, Deborah Redwood, Robert Reid, Sue Smalkowski, Arja Välimäki, Vyvian Wilson, Mary Wingrave.
This document provides an overview of the "unfolding" art exhibition at Nan Tien Institute that explores connections between Australian and Asian cultures. It discusses how globalization has led to the blending of cultures and references artworks in the exhibition that depict themes of cultural exchange, spirituality, and mutual understanding between East and West. The curator aims to show how artists in the Illawarra region are influenced by and engaged with Asian perspectives through their work.
The document is a teacher resource packet for an exhibition at the Museum of Arts and Design titled "New Territories: Laboratories for Design, Craft and Art in Latin America." It includes introductory information about the exhibition's themes of navigating space, repurposing objects, developing new markets, cultivating experimentation, craft legacy, and experimenting with materials. The packet provides discussion topics, hands-on activities, and lessons to help students explore the key concepts and ideas from the exhibition both before and after their visit.
This document provides an introduction to and overview of geometric patterns in Islamic art, along with images and descriptions of 6 examples of art from the Metropolitan Museum of Art that illustrate geometric design. It discusses how geometric patterns were created using a limited set of basic shapes combined through repetition, discusses the underlying grid structure, and notes key characteristics like their two-dimensional nature and infinite expandability. The examples show geometric patterns being used to decorate glass, wood, tiles, and architectural elements from the 8th-16th centuries across the Islamic world.
This document provides materials for teaching about Islamic geometric art and pattern-making activities. It includes an introduction to geometric design in Islamic art, descriptions of selected artworks from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and pattern-making activities that allow students to recreate Islamic geometric patterns using only a compass and straightedge. The activities are intended to spark interdisciplinary learning about math, art, culture and history.
This document provides materials for teaching about Islamic geometric art and pattern-making activities. It includes an introduction to geometric design in Islamic art, descriptions of selected artworks from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and pattern-making activities that allow students to recreate Islamic geometric patterns using only a compass and straightedge. The activities are intended to spark interdisciplinary learning about math, art, culture and history.
Material utilizado en la sesión 3 del Taller de Geogebra, desarrollado con estudiantes de Licenciatura en Educación Matemática y computación, en la Universidad de Santiago de Chile (Prof. Rafael Miranda Molina).
Más información en el post original: http://www.geometriadinamica.cl/2012/12/taller-de-geogebra-lemc-usach/
Interview with paul duncum by joao pedro frois april 2009joao miguel
This document summarizes an interview with Professor Paul Duncum regarding visual culture and art education. Some key points discussed include:
- Visual culture has become increasingly important as visual media dominates how people obtain information and entertainment.
- Visual culture encompasses fine art, mass popular art, and vernacular culture, as well as how images function within social contexts.
- There has been a push for art education to transition to a visual culture studies approach to make it more relevant to students' lives and engage them with broader sociocultural issues. However, this transition has been gradual in most schools and art museums.
- Training teachers in visual culture requires addressing conceptual complexities while making the approach accessible and hands-
1) The document presents a new design method for wearable art that involves a designer writing a story based on research to inspire the design of a garment.
2) As an example, the designer wrote the story of "A Woman's Journey" incorporating cultural and historical images into the narrative.
3) A dress was designed and created using various textile techniques that represented elements from the story in order to convey the artistic meaning and cultural significance.
Steve and Social Tagging: Seeing Collections Through Visitors' EyesSteve Project
Brief introduction to Steve: The Museum Social Tagging Project, prepared for the RUSA Presidents' Program at the American Library Association's 2009 annual meeting.
Skin_the conflence of art, fashion and media_CAA_LinkedinKathryn Simon Ph.D.
This document provides information about student work and a panel discussion on fashion and art. It summarizes a panel presentation by Kathryn Simon on emerging fashion narratives and the increasing intersection between fashion and art. Some key points include: student media and papers can be viewed online; Simon chaired a panel at CAA examining how fashion is influenced by performance-based work and new creative endeavors; the panel discussed how fashion expresses nomadic cultural flows and is influenced by daily life in diverse societies; and fashion is becoming a medium for conceptual art ideas as boundaries between art and fashion blur.
This document summarizes Julia Vallera's thesis project called Color Wheelz, which is a custom designed van that travels to different New York City neighborhoods. The van contains colorful objects and activities for visitors to interact with and manipulate to reflect on and comment on the colors they see in the surrounding area. Vallera conducted research on mobility, public art, participatory art, and color perception. This research informed the development of Color Wheelz as a mobile installation aimed at recording differences and similarities in color usage across communities. The document outlines Vallera's research, concept development, methodology, evaluation, and the process that led to creating Color Wheelz as a traveling emporium for exploring color.
The document discusses Robert Stein's role as Deputy Director for Research, Technology, and Engagement at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. It provides details about Stein's background and experience in various roles at universities and museums. It also outlines the IMA's strategic plan, with a focus on establishing the museum as a leader in research areas like art history, conservation science, and visitor studies. The document advocates for an approach of audience engagement over education and discusses various models and theories around maximizing visitor experience.
The document discusses strategies for museums to cultivate meaningful engagement with cultural audiences through conversation and collaboration, examining how museums can move from being places that simply interpret cultural inheritance to becoming public squares that foster open discussions and welcome participation from visitors in interpreting artworks and cultural objects. It also explores how museums can optimize visitor experiences through approaches like identifying visitor motivations, providing interpretive materials focused on ideas, objects, or people, creating opportunities for flow states and epiphanies, and giving visitors a voice.
Merging Traditional "Uli" Painting Techniques/Symbols and Computer Graphicsikennaaghanya
For many in the South Eastern part of Nigeria, Digital Art is rapidly becoming the preferred medium to produce poster designs and digital paintings. With a mouse, appropriate software and hardware, monitor, a scanner and a laser printer, one can control a project from start to finish. Traditional “Uli” Body Painting techniques/symbols at the same time, are visual media, which the writer describes as static media (i.e. it can only show snapshots), but it can be enhanced by stylistic elements of a metalanguage to produce the visual impression of dynamics. The viewer's imagination is asked to interpret these symbols and to change the meaning of objects actually shown. “Uli” is an expression of the Ibo people’s capacity for creative body design, which is firmly rooted in their myths and their experience of life in the past, present and future. At its best, it is an expression of their synthetic present, the epic of their search for a new order in the contemporary world. Unfortunately, the “Uli” Traditional Body Painting technique is gradually fading away, as well as the use of the Uli symbols. The emphasis of this paper is to identify the advantages in merging the use of Digital Arts and “Uli” Traditional Body Painting techniques/symbols in producing social awareness themed painting/poster designs and sculptural pieces in Nigeria, with particular reference to the Ibo people of the South Eastern Region of Nigeria. This way, the poster/painting will not just serve as a communicative medium but also as a work of Art (in terms of its aesthetic qualities) and the Uli symbols can as well be preserved.
This document provides information about a course on identity, including contact details for the lecturer, class times, assessment details, and required readings and resources. Students are expected to submit their first assignment, an illustrated written piece on their identities, by March 15th. The document also shares examples of artworks addressing themes of self-portraits and identity, including works by Ema Tavola, Albrecht Dürer, Kazimir Malevich, and Frida Kahlo. Concepts around reflexive identity from sociologist Anthony Giddens are discussed.
This document provides strategies and resources for integrating art history into K-12 classrooms in an engaging way. It outlines goals of making art history relevant, engaging, and manageable for teachers. Key recommendations include examining artworks in context, looking for themes, being inclusive, and allowing student exploration. Short and long-term project ideas are presented to incorporate art history, such as having students act as travel agents or compose songs about artworks. Resources like SmartHistory and museum websites are also suggested.
The document discusses using the Yiwarra Kuju exhibition at the National Museum of Australia to teach students about Aboriginal art. It describes how the exhibition helped allay the students' fears of engaging with Aboriginal art by showing them art from the Western Desert that tells histories and stories in a way that is relatable to non-Aboriginal people. It details how the students were inspired by techniques used in the exhibition to create their own artworks telling stories of place and identity. Their collaborative artworks were exhibited, demonstrating how the Yiwarra Kuju exhibition facilitated cross-cultural understanding and inquiry-based learning about Aboriginal art.
Art appreciation is a general introduction to visual arts that is designed to create a deeper appreciation of the creative processes involved. It reviews two and three-dimensional art forms, methods, and media, examines visual elements and principles of design, and briefly surveys art styles from prehistoric to 20th century. The course is oriented towards students without formal study in these disciplines and serves as a beginning level class to familiarize students with different types of art and how to intelligently discuss art.
unfolding - Nan Tien Institute art exhibition
2 - 22 November 2012
12 IAVA artists explored the idea of unfolding in the context of Australian Artists in the Asian Century.
Artists: Kendal Heyes, Jennifer Jackson, Garry Jones, Alena Kennedy, Flossie Peitsch, Jennifer Portman, Deborah Redwood, Robert Reid, Sue Smalkowski, Arja Välimäki, Vyvian Wilson, Mary Wingrave.
This document provides an overview of the "unfolding" art exhibition at Nan Tien Institute that explores connections between Australian and Asian cultures. It discusses how globalization has led to the blending of cultures and references artworks in the exhibition that depict themes of cultural exchange, spirituality, and mutual understanding between East and West. The curator aims to show how artists in the Illawarra region are influenced by and engaged with Asian perspectives through their work.
The document is a teacher resource packet for an exhibition at the Museum of Arts and Design titled "New Territories: Laboratories for Design, Craft and Art in Latin America." It includes introductory information about the exhibition's themes of navigating space, repurposing objects, developing new markets, cultivating experimentation, craft legacy, and experimenting with materials. The packet provides discussion topics, hands-on activities, and lessons to help students explore the key concepts and ideas from the exhibition both before and after their visit.
This document provides an introduction to and overview of geometric patterns in Islamic art, along with images and descriptions of 6 examples of art from the Metropolitan Museum of Art that illustrate geometric design. It discusses how geometric patterns were created using a limited set of basic shapes combined through repetition, discusses the underlying grid structure, and notes key characteristics like their two-dimensional nature and infinite expandability. The examples show geometric patterns being used to decorate glass, wood, tiles, and architectural elements from the 8th-16th centuries across the Islamic world.
This document provides materials for teaching about Islamic geometric art and pattern-making activities. It includes an introduction to geometric design in Islamic art, descriptions of selected artworks from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and pattern-making activities that allow students to recreate Islamic geometric patterns using only a compass and straightedge. The activities are intended to spark interdisciplinary learning about math, art, culture and history.
This document provides materials for teaching about Islamic geometric art and pattern-making activities. It includes an introduction to geometric design in Islamic art, descriptions of selected artworks from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and pattern-making activities that allow students to recreate Islamic geometric patterns using only a compass and straightedge. The activities are intended to spark interdisciplinary learning about math, art, culture and history.
Material utilizado en la sesión 3 del Taller de Geogebra, desarrollado con estudiantes de Licenciatura en Educación Matemática y computación, en la Universidad de Santiago de Chile (Prof. Rafael Miranda Molina).
Más información en el post original: http://www.geometriadinamica.cl/2012/12/taller-de-geogebra-lemc-usach/
Interview with paul duncum by joao pedro frois april 2009joao miguel
This document summarizes an interview with Professor Paul Duncum regarding visual culture and art education. Some key points discussed include:
- Visual culture has become increasingly important as visual media dominates how people obtain information and entertainment.
- Visual culture encompasses fine art, mass popular art, and vernacular culture, as well as how images function within social contexts.
- There has been a push for art education to transition to a visual culture studies approach to make it more relevant to students' lives and engage them with broader sociocultural issues. However, this transition has been gradual in most schools and art museums.
- Training teachers in visual culture requires addressing conceptual complexities while making the approach accessible and hands-
1) The document presents a new design method for wearable art that involves a designer writing a story based on research to inspire the design of a garment.
2) As an example, the designer wrote the story of "A Woman's Journey" incorporating cultural and historical images into the narrative.
3) A dress was designed and created using various textile techniques that represented elements from the story in order to convey the artistic meaning and cultural significance.
Steve and Social Tagging: Seeing Collections Through Visitors' EyesSteve Project
Brief introduction to Steve: The Museum Social Tagging Project, prepared for the RUSA Presidents' Program at the American Library Association's 2009 annual meeting.
Skin_the conflence of art, fashion and media_CAA_LinkedinKathryn Simon Ph.D.
This document provides information about student work and a panel discussion on fashion and art. It summarizes a panel presentation by Kathryn Simon on emerging fashion narratives and the increasing intersection between fashion and art. Some key points include: student media and papers can be viewed online; Simon chaired a panel at CAA examining how fashion is influenced by performance-based work and new creative endeavors; the panel discussed how fashion expresses nomadic cultural flows and is influenced by daily life in diverse societies; and fashion is becoming a medium for conceptual art ideas as boundaries between art and fashion blur.
This document summarizes Julia Vallera's thesis project called Color Wheelz, which is a custom designed van that travels to different New York City neighborhoods. The van contains colorful objects and activities for visitors to interact with and manipulate to reflect on and comment on the colors they see in the surrounding area. Vallera conducted research on mobility, public art, participatory art, and color perception. This research informed the development of Color Wheelz as a mobile installation aimed at recording differences and similarities in color usage across communities. The document outlines Vallera's research, concept development, methodology, evaluation, and the process that led to creating Color Wheelz as a traveling emporium for exploring color.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
हिंदी वर्णमाला पीपीटी, hindi alphabet PPT presentation, hindi varnamala PPT, Hindi Varnamala pdf, हिंदी स्वर, हिंदी व्यंजन, sikhiye hindi varnmala, dr. mulla adam ali, hindi language and literature, hindi alphabet with drawing, hindi alphabet pdf, hindi varnamala for childrens, hindi language, hindi varnamala practice for kids, https://www.drmullaadamali.com
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
Beyond Degrees - Empowering the Workforce in the Context of Skills-First.pptxEduSkills OECD
Iván Bornacelly, Policy Analyst at the OECD Centre for Skills, OECD, presents at the webinar 'Tackling job market gaps with a skills-first approach' on 12 June 2024
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
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Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/PECBCERTIFICATION
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
Film vocab for eal 3 students: Australia the movie
Montréal test, no download
1. Dear folks –
A few years ago, Daniel Walker,
speaking as the Director of the Textile Museum, began his presentation at a rug conference by asking
where the next generations of rug and textile collectors, textile museum supporters and textile
conference goers are to come from.
A titter ran through the audience.
Don't laugh," Dan cautioned, "there's hardy anyone in this room under 40."
It got quiet.
And, of course, all of us, rug collectors and enthusiasts, who frequent rug and textile museums,
exhibitions, conferences and clubs, are nearly constantly aware of the relative absence of younger faces
in this world.
2. Various strategies are being employed in efforts to draw the potential future
generations, but many of these seem to me to be predicated on the assumption that
the traditional material, residing in the various collections, institutional and private, is
not an asset, and that this drawing in must be based on contemporary textiles.
This is a post about an effort that attracts my eye because it does not "give up" on
the possibility that younger people might be encouraged to engage with traditional
rugs and textiles, and does so in a way that reserves to them the character of their
response.
The folks who have done this, are members of the Montreal Oriental Rug Society,
4. In this post, I am going to present, mostly, a virtual version of the catalog
that was produced as part of this effort and exhibition, but I am also going
to talk to it, as I go along.
I will draw primarily on the catalog materials, but will also use some
others, I have been given on the side. As indicated elsewhere, I will also
sometimes supplement with outside images, to illustrate text points, as
well as to relieve fatigue from extended text reading on a monitor.
My treatment will not follow the catalog sequence, nor does it pretend to
be complete.
It will be long, but I think I can predict it will be interesting. Coffee and
wine breaks are allowed, even encouraged.
I have also, occasionally, indulged in modest editing, but hope not to
have intruded on the fact that these responses were created by members
of the Dawson College community, mostly student, but also some faculty.
5. The “Logic” of the Effort
The basic logic of the Montreal club’s design was familiar (quilter
“challenges” are often based on it, and, as I write, The Textile
Museum has an exhibition hanging that asked noted fiber artists to
look in the TM archives and choose a piece or pieces to serve as an
inspiration for a contemporary textile they would create).
But what attracted my eye, in particular, is the way the Montreal club
used this design to draw university students into traditional woven
materials, while reserving to them the unencumbered opportunity to
respond to them on their own terms.
To repeat: the Montreal club demonstrated that the traditional
materials in most textile museum collections are not necessarily a
disadvantage in efforts to engage new generations.
Giuseppe says more about how they did this in his catalog forward
which follows.
Note: I have added some images that are not in the catalog both to illustrate and break up the sometimes,
intensive, text only, passages.
6. Forward (this is Giuseppe, writing)
Oriental carpets, among other forms of woven goods, have been part of the
rich material culture of Central Asia and Western Europe.
They are integral to both secular and religious circles and have become
expressions of social status, aesthetic appeal, and emblematic markers of
tribal clans. Unlike other aesthetic forms of high art expression, however,
these items were functional for everyday use. Indeed, their tactile, but
lustrous, nature made them appropriate to keep the floors underfoot warm,
to rest or to sleep on, and to act as a mat for worshipping. Their makers
cherished these necessary objects of daily use and saw them as worthy of
artistic embellishment.
7. Anatolia’s carpet history is rich and colorful with blends of different cultures, languages
and ethnicities. In itself, this history may have been enough to satisfy a curator’s impetus
to mount an exhibition of antique Anatolian woven products, within the confines of an
equally vibrant college community.
Installation, Warren Flowers Art Gallery Dawson College, Montreal , Canada
8. I felt compelled, however, to add another dimension. Given my experience as a teaching
artist of 25 years at this institution, simply presenting ethnographic material in the
conventional manner for public education could not completely satisfy my desire for
interactive responses. Instead, I wanted to engage students beyond the mere cursory
looking at historical objects not immediately available within their experience.
9. How to temporarily distract them from the pulse of youth culture,
Warcraft III iphone
Relationships
StuDIES
Facebook
Athletics
Concerts
and, more importantly, how to enrich their experience of discovery and
connection, through positive reception of these textiles, were questions I had to
address.
Inevitably, the challenge was daunting, but the idea to convene a manageable
groups of students of diverse fields of study and ask them to creatively respond
to images of rugs, intended for an exhibition, seemed an innocuous, but
effective, approach.
10. The process was as simple as casting a net, though without any guarantee of gathering participants.
11. Equipped with a slide presentation,
and with guided assistance,
I visited a number of classes and followed up with a talk about the rug making process,
the weavers that made them, dyes, symbols and design, period of manufacture, purpose,
and their relevance then and today.
12. So why participate?
I explained a number of reasons.
In contributing to this project, a student would, inextricably, become implicated in a community
undertaking and, with their voice, draw the community’s attention.
Their inspiration and intimate responses to these woven objects would also empower them to convey
a message acknowledging the richness of cultural diversity over the cultural differences that set apart
and alienate regions and societies.
13. Sue Elmslie,
literature teacher of the Song and Poem course, was
very receptive in introducing this idea as a springboard
for an assignment in her course.
Andrew Katz, of the English department, and a coordinator of the
SPACE initiative, was instrumental, largely responsible for
drawing the attention of students and faculty beyond my grasp.
14. Several faculty members, who were significant in attending to students as well, took it upon
themselves to contribute to creating a work.
Several students and faculty availed themselves of the resources offered by members of the Montreal
Oriental Rug Society, who were readily available in answering questions.
The “Anatolian project,” as it was dubbed, became a directed project, with the expressed hope of
inclusion, irrespective of a student’s course or program.
MORS members Bruce Young and Jim Hampton, Pres. Frank Mulvey, Artist and Faculty
15. What is manifested in the exhibition and in this catalogue, through artwork, creative writing,
documentation and science analysis, are students’ desires to contribute beyond the scope of their
studies towards participating in events designed to enrich our community and their own welfare.
Anatolian Rugs; Spirited Reflections
And within such an endeavour, it was my aspiration, after all, to share through both the student’s
language and that of the rug enthusiast my passion for beautifully crafted woven items.
Giuseppe Di Leo,
Director, Warren Flowers Art Gallery
Dawson College, Montreal
16. The catalog begins with a still by two
Cinema and Communications students
Max Marin and David Allen. Their
contribution was a video presentation of
an interview with Montreal dealer and
MORS member Mourad Ozcanian.
Below is their statement.
Anatolian Carpets: Through the Eyes of Mourad
Our ambition is to present the cultural and traditional values of these carpets in Montreal compared
to those of the Anatolian homeland through a filmed documentary. These piece of art have, as
some would say, devolved into a corporate endeavor, yet the expressions and symbols of the past
are still present in every carpet. Mourad is a collector and distributor of these antique carpets. His
interpretations and uses of these masterful carpets as well as a glimpse of the Anatolian carpet
trade in Istanbul, make up what this video project is all about. Whether it’s here in the heart of the
western world or across the globe in the birthplace of of these artistic pieces, every carpet has a
story and everybody involved days to day with these works can shed some light on what these
Anatolian carpets really mean today.
17. Bruce Young, a member of the Montreal Oriental Rug Society, wrote this catalogue introduction:
Antique Anatolian Carpets and Textiles
Anatolian weaving means many different things to many different people. The region
referred to by rug collectors as Anatolia would, today, cover much of modern Turkey.
Although weaving has undoubtedly taken place in this region for thousands of years, the
oldest surviving examples date back to at least the 13th century. Precise dating of these
fragments is uncertain and is largely based on the age of the mosques where they were
found or on other ancient accounts that are simply inconclusive.
The evolution of Anatolian weaving since the 13th century is best understood by
examining the many cultural and political changes that were occurring at that time.
Design and colour in textiles from this period were influenced by many factors including;
the expansion of the Muslim faith in the region by
the Seljuk Turks followed by the Ottomans, the
silk trade with the Far East and, the tribal and
often nomadic nature to the peoples inhabiting
the remote regions of this vast territory.
18. At approximately the same time the Ottomans were capturing Constantinople and
establishing an empire that would last until the end of the First World War, Anatolian
weavers were producing carpets that were fervently sought out by the rich and powerful
Europeans of that time.
A testament to the great value that was placed on these carpets is the manner in which
Anatolian carpets were portrayed in Renaissance paintings by such artists as Hans
Holbein (1498-1543), Lorenzo Lotto (1480-1556) and Hans Memling (1430-1494).
Magnificent Anatolian carpets were displayed on the tables and floors of the wealthy or
on the altars of cathedrals. Descriptions of Anatolian carpets still refer today to the
“Holbein pattern” or the “Memling gull” and have a direct link back to the design elements
found in the carpets displayed in these 600 year-old paintings.
19. The design, dyes, weave and tradition of Anatolian pieces from this period provided a
basis for the development of Anatolian rugs through the 18th and 19th centuries. During
this period, the complexity, the bright and vibrant dye colours, the predominantly wool
construction and the use of the symmetrical knot are where the similarities between
Anatolian weaving ends.
The stylized flowers and curvilinear designs, found in some Western and Central
Anatolian carpets, are in contrast to the dominant geometric and rectilinear designs of
Eastern Anatolian weaving.
The coarse weave of the Konya rugs and tribal Yöruks have a much different look and
feel when compared to the denser weave of the Gördes prayer rug or Kula.
The classic sejjadeh or prayer rug size was dominant, but so, too, was the heybe, or
small bags, and yastik, or “cushion” rug.
20. Anatolian rugs and textiles from the Ottoman period were not woven by machines or
mass produced, but were hand-woven by men and women for use in grand Ottoman
palaces and mosques or to decorate the floors and walls of tents, or carry grain and salt
to markets.
The art of Anatolian weaving evolved through this period, apprentices learning from
master weavers, daughters learning from mothers. Weavers were guided by and
borrowed from traditional design, but added new elements, reflecting changing cultural
influences, a nomadic way of life or simply artistic licence. In nomadic tribes, women
were the weavers, proudly passing on traditions, patterns and colours through natural
dyes, from grandmother to daughter to granddaughter.
This is how Anatolian weaving developed from the time of Holbein to the First World War.
21. Nineteenth century Central Anatolian Mucur, Kirşehir and Ladik prayer rugs, early 19th
century Western Anatolian Demerci rugs, the tribal Yöruk rugs of Eastern Anatolia, 19th
century Western Anatolian Monastir rugs, Malatya and Gaziantep Anatolian Kurdish rugs,
Transylvanian designs and antique tribal kilims are part of a collection of Anatolian
weaving that is as much art as utilitarian, as much a representation of diversity of culture
as it is commerce.
22. Zoe Worsnip, a Liberal Arts student respondent, chose the catalog cover rug for her focus. She wrote
about the “Holbein” gul that decorates its field.
Yoruk Rug
First half 19th century
Malayta, Kurdish, Eastern Anatolia
112/124 x 249 cm
This piece, even with some condition issues, illustrates the lustrous wool and beautiful dye colours
employed by Kurdish weavers in the mountainous Malatya region of Central/Eastern Anatolia.
Of particular interest is the use of the Holbein motifs in the three remaining “Sandikli” guls.
23. Here is what Zoe wrote:
Holbein Motif
The earliest known creations of Turkish rugs date back to the 14th century. In fact, most surviving
copies were designed for commercial purposes and traded throughout the Orient, reaching the far
corners of Europe by the 16th century. Given the distance to which these creations were distributed,
only a careful analysis of a rug’s intricate pattern, colour and weaving could shed light on its origins.
In order to understand the origins of early Turkish rugs, researchers began separating abstract
patterns into classes of distinctive geometric repetitions. These patterns were oftentimes depicted in
Renaissance paintings and, as a result came to be designated by the name of their painter.
24. One of the most important instances of this phenomenon
is the Holbein motif, depicted in The Ambassadors (1533)
by Hans Holbein the Younger
The Holbein motif is one of the earliest Turkish rug designs, used prior to the 15th century up until the
second part of the 19th century. This design typically takes two different forms: the small patterned
Holbein and the large patterned Holbein. Both types are made up of an octagon paired with a gul
motif. A gul motif is considered to be a tribal emblem of such nomadic people as the Slaghur or Salor
Turkoman, who were central weavers of the time. The larger design,
present in this Yoruk from the Malatya region and dating back to 1800, depicts the larger Holbein,
which contains greater Islamic strapwork detailing its interior forms. The Holbein design’s long-
standing use even permeated into rug motifs made by Islamic and post-Islamic Spain, as well as
Egypt. Nevertheless, its depiction in western paintings remains one of the most popular and
recognized representations of early Turkish rug creations.
25. Holbein’s Ambassadors depicts two men, Jean de Dinteville and George de Selve, on opposite sides
of a table, symbolizing the secular and religious powers in fifteenth century Europe.
While both men appear to rival each other, they are overshadowed by the series of objects strewn
across the large Turkish rug covering the table. These objects portray the recent advances in
science and other technologies. Innovations such as these greatly affected the efficiency of
exploration, eventually giving rise to the Age of Discovery.
26. The Turkish rug, found underneath various tokens of the Renaissance, presents the basis of all other
fourteenth and fifteenth century innovations: capital.
As trade increased, materialist desires did too, prompting a desire for luxurious and exotic things such
as the Turkish rug. Creations such as these came to be traded through the increasingly numerous
Oriental trade routes. Increase in trade meant economic security, which fuelled all other sectors,
such as arts and sciences.
Thus, the presence of a Turkish creation in western European art bears witness to the rise in
economic power of the European states, which could be seen as a building block toward all other
Renaissance achievements.
27. Erin Lacelle, a Graphics Design student, with a background in science, chose the rug below for her
response. Her response is the image on the right.
Double –Niche Demirci Kula Electron Mircrogaph of Plant and Animal
Tissues
(magnified 10 million times actual size)
28. Here is the gallery label on the Demirci Kula rug.
Double –Niche Demirci Kula
Late 19th century
Dermirci (near Kula), Western Anatolia
121 x 171 cm
The design of this rug is based on the variant of a double-niche “Transylvanian” rug with design
similarities notable with a Transylvanian rug fragment you will see later in the exhibition. An
almost exact replica of this rug is found on the cover of the book “Carpets of the Orient,” by Ladmilla
Kyborla and Dominique Darbois.
29. And here is the catalog description of Ms. Lavelle’s micrograph response image.
With this project, the designer aims to expose the public to the beauty of the shapes and
structures traditionally exhibited exclusively to the scientific community. The response to
the Kemirci Kula ws produced using electron micrographs, which were used with permission
from Dartmouth University’s database. The images are samples of a walnut stem, mamallian
lung tissue and mamallian pancreatic tissue, manified up to 10 million times their actual size.
30. And here is a one-quarter detail of complete image to let you better see the detail in this imaginative
response.
31. The Demirci Kula rug inspired two other student responses.
First, it inspired the poem below by Marie-Claude Gill-Lacroix.
Demerci Kula
Feeling of the knees that once were pressed
White marks where the weave is distressed
Those prayers, they weighed
Flowered skirts: prone are the followers
Blue petals flirt with legs of bobbers
Blooms for an hour
Prayer rug for a ancient Turk
Flowers bloom for a young girl’s work
Tremendous worth
Demerci Kula on the wall
Raised at last, no prayer, no fall
Poised and stretched tall
32. The Demirci Kula rug also drew a response from
Armen Keuchguerian, a Fine Arts student. This is
how he described his graphic submission.
I chose the Demirci Kula 19th century rug as
my source of inspiration due to its very captivating
intricate designs, patterns and colors.
The deep blue and the red ornate center enclosed
within a light frame of flowers, evokes a narrative
I try to grasp within my piece.
33. A late 19th century
Mucur rug, with a niche
format, also drew several
responses.
Mucur Prayer Rug
Last quarter, 19th century
Mucur (Mudjur), Central Anatolia
118 x 178 cm
A prayer rug from the Central
Anatolian region. Although best
described as a Mucur, the rug
shows many design elements
associated with the Kaysehir
weaving area. Classic use of red
wefts, combined with red mihrab,
outlined in light blue and set of a
green field. Of particular interest
are he design elements in the
centre of the mihrab.
34. First, Michael Oberman, a student in history and economics, wrote the essay
below, focused on this rug.
Beyond the Prayer Rug : Window Into the Culture of Time
The history of the later Ottoman Empire is rife with intense paradoxes.
Having survived immense decline throughout the 18th century, the Ottoman
Empire would experience a resurgence which would allow it to survive
another century, finally ending with the First World War. Even stranger than
the empire’s unexpected revival is that fact that these economic, social and
political advancements were, for the most part, diffused from generations of
prolonged conflict and social interactions with Christian Europe. However,
this is not to say that the Ottoman Empire was under-developed, in fact, the
traditional view of the backwards and savage Islamic world has been
revisited in recent years to acknowledge the “advanced and cosmopolitan”
(Philliou, 1) qualities the empire exhibited as a whole. This is not to say that
the Ottoman Empire existed in a perpetual utopian existence. The decline
throughout the 18th century had created numerous social conflicts and
Ottoman art like this Anatolian rug reflected the anomalies which existed in
modern-day Turkey throughout the 19th century.
35. The first event of interest to us when examining the rug on the left was the
growing industrialization of the Anatolian rugs during the 19th century. The
rich of Europe saw no problem with fighting a theological war with Turkey
while simultaneously consuming their luxury goods, and as a resiult
“European demand for ‘oriental carpets’ mounted rapidly” (Quataert, 2). As to
why this demand suddenly appeared, it is possible to cite the increase in
wealth caused by the Industrial Revolution happening in Europe at the time.
To compensate for this increased demand Christian workers began to be
allowed in the rug industry. Also of note is the rise in power of the Phanariots
experienced about the same time period (Philliou, 10). The Phanariots were
a network of Christian elite “intimately bound up with the Ottoman
government (Philliou, 13). Considering the plethora of influences , at the
time, it is not surprise then that there was a possible theocratic exchange that
took place, undetected by both parties involved. This phenomenon serves to
explain the presence of anchors, traditional Christian symbols on an Islamic
prayer rug.
36. The anchor, drawing off its literal use, is seen in Christian theology as a sign
of Christ, as he is the permanent weight the devout use to situate themselves
in the physical world (Hassertt). Due to the monotheistic nature of the Islamic
religion, there should be little difficulty in expropriating the symbol of the
anchor and applying it to Allah: which is exactly what happened. Similarly,
the flower and garden imagery one sees on the rug almost assuredly
originate in the Garden of Eden motif present in Judeo-Christian works.
37. However, it is important to understand that the rug was created in a culture
ruled predominantly by Turkish and Islamic values. The geometric patterns
which repeat all over the rug are unique to Anatolian art work and were
heavily favored by the Ottoman elite. (Miccuci). It is also possible that the
recurring patterns emphasize the orderly pattern of nature of a divinely-
created world, but, an analysis such as this can only be considered an
educated guess (Miccuci).
The shape in the center of the carpet is indubitably a mosque, and the tipe of
the building is meant to point toward Mecca.
The mosque also serves as an indicator of where the worshiper is to sit on
the prayer rug, but done so in a particularly symbolic manner.
38. Lastly, there is a possible color symbolism which takes place on the rug.
Generally, in Anatolian artwork, red and white respectively represent
innocence and purity (Halici).
The almost sole use of these two colors inside the mosque , perhaps,
emphasized the importance of these qualities in the Islamic religion.
As we have seen through an analysis of many of the aspects of the Mudjur
prayer rug, all levels of art can be used as a window into the culture of the
time. The fusion between Islamic and Christian symbolism which takes place
on the rug is representative of the strange social atmosphere which
characterized the Ottoman Empire at the time.
39. Frank Mulvey, a faculty member,
also chose the Mucur “prayer” rug
for his submission.
Here, first, is the image he
produced. I’m presenting it here ,
initially, without any explanation,
excepting to say that he describes it
as a “charcoal drawing,“ not as a
“photograph,” and that he entitles it
“Temple for Humanity, 2011.”
40. I had asked Guiseppe whether we have any images of contributors, working on their
submisons, and Mr. Mulvey had documented his creative process , carefully.
So, here is a little side-trip to observe that.
This is Mr. Mulvey writing:”
…I was struck by the prayer niche
architectural motif.
I decided to make a drawing of the rug in
an architectural setting.”
50. A third response to
the Mucur “prayer” rug
was created by
Madeline Sibthorpe, a
Fine Arts student.
51. Although, the Mucur is
her inspiriation
reference, Ms.
Sibthorpe has shaped
her response to it
distinctively. She has
retained its “niche”
design character, but
has changed its colors
and design specifics.
Her creation is open to
different readings. It
could be a covering
with holes through
which parts of an
underlying carpet can
be seen.
But there are shadows
around the “shoe”
prints and some sole
designs can be seen.
What is going on here?
52. Here is Ms. Sibthorne’s
description of her intent.
My piece is a reflection
of how we leave marks
everywhere we walk.
This is especially
noticeable on carpets.
I wanted to show the
beautiful patterns of
tapestries on the
bottoms of the shoes,
imprinting not only the
ground, but the shoe.
This piece also shows
how little people think
about what we are
experiencing.
53. There were four yastiks in the exhibition. Here they are, one at a time with their
gallery labels.
54.
55.
56.
57. Cristina Negrean, a student in Health Sciences, selected this fourth yastik for a very
definite purpose.
Here is her response to it as it appears in her catalog entry.
67. Lucas Ferguson Sharp,
a Fine Arts student,
also chose the yellow
ground Konya “prayer”
rug for his response.
68. Azin Mohammadi, a student, created the poem on the right, in response to the exhibition.
He did not reference this specific rug, but could have been thinking of a similar one.
Karakecili Rug
19th century
Western Anatolia
138 x 82 cm
Karakecili (“black goat”)
Wefts are black goat hair
69. There were three Konya “prayer” rugs in the exhibition. This contribution by Emilie
Cassini, a student, was placed opposite the second one in the catalog.
70. And here is the
second Konya “prayer
rug”, again, with its
gallery label.
Konya Prayer Rug
19th century
Central Anatolia
100 X 147cm
71. The third Konya “prayer”
rug, did not draw a
specific response. My
own is that I’d take it
home in a minute.
72. Here it is, again, with a
gallery label you can read.
73. And a couple of closer detail images.
Gauche, but nice.
75. Roy Hartling, who heads the
Professional Photography program
at Dawson College responded to
this rug.
I cannot show, adequately, the
details in his photo of a wall in
Istanbul, but let me try on the next
page
76.
77. And here, again, is the
inspiring Karapinar rug,
this time with its gallery
label.
78. Elissa Brock, a Health Sciences student, asked three questions of the rugs in the
exhibition:
Why Are the Colours of Rugs, Made in Eastern Anatolia vs Western Anatolia, Different?
How Does the Dye Bond to Wool?
How Do Different Chemicals Create Different Colours?
I’ve repeated her questions ,on the next three pages, together with her answers, and
associated them with rugs from the exhibition.
82. Andrew Katz, a faculty
member, choose a rug,
originally, likely, woven for
tourists, but now old
enough to collect as an
oddity.
83. Rugs like this were also woven in
accurate reproductions of
Turkish paper currency.
Mr. Katz juxtapositioned this rug
with a quotation attributed to
Seth Lerer, who does historical
analysis of the English language.
84. Alfred Hitchcock, famously, founds ways to insert himself into his movies,
Well, the next rug provides me the chance to do that, too.
I first heard about this Montreal exhibition and project when Giuseppe Di Leo, sent me an
email, asking whether a participant in this project could draw on my postings on my
Textiles and Text web site. I said “of course,” and eventually Giuseppe sent me a copy of
the catalog.
I had given a Textile Museum “rug morning” on the “Memling gul” motif and had
subsequently posted a virtual version of it on Textiles and Text.
85. I got nearly through the catalog before
discovering that Susan Elmslie, a faculty
member, and one of the real forces
behind this exhibition and project, had
picked this rug as the focus for her
response.
You may remember in Moliere’s play of
that name, his Bourgeois Gentilhome,
informed by his teacher that literature is
divided into poetry and prose, and that
every word his speaks is prose. Goes
out, proudly, bragging about that.
Ms. Elmslie, had done Moliere one
better: she had used some of my
description of the Memling gul in my
post, to fashion a “found” poem about
the Memling gul.
86. There was a rug in the
Montreal exhibition
with Memling guls.
88. There’s a little more to notice about Ms. Elmslie’s contribution.
Look, again, at her title.
Poets, and lit majors may know perfectly well what “pantuom” means, but folks like me likely have to
look it up.
When you do, one discovers that a “pantuom” is a specific poetic “verse form, composed of quatrains
in which the second and fourth lines are repeated as the first and third lines of the following quatrain.
So much for “finding.”
Ms. Elmslie’s “findings” and construction of her poem are not serendipitous. She is a skilled poet, at
work in her craft.
Now read it, again, on the next page, with new eyes.
89.
90. OK. I started with an issue and a question and I don’t want to lose it.
I said that the Montreal “Anatolian Project” attracted my eye because it was an
effort that did “not "give up" on the possibility that younger people might be
encouraged to engage with traditional rugs and textiles.”
So how did they do? What were the apparent results?
Well, first, I think we have to say that their “engagement” objective was achieved. The
contributor area on the credits page of the catalog, lists the names of 25 students and
four faculty members.
More, many of the accepted and published responses to the rugs in the collection were
imaginative and creative, and some, it seems to me, were quite remarkable.
I would hold that the Montreal Oriental Rug Society has demonstrated that it is quite
within our reach to engage the “next generations” with the kind of traditional material that
populates most of the collections of most museums with a significant rugs and textiles
collection.
There is no need to assume that traditional materials are not an asset in appealing to the
folks that follow us. We just have to be creative about engaging them.
91. Yes, there were instances of seeming less than gifted poetry (although we should
probably be cautious about that judgment, unless we are competent in that field).
Experienced collectors might complain that some rugs of real merit were not selected for
response and should have been.
But it seems to me that the basic design “worked” very well.
More, I would argue, that the real engagement of the Dawson College community is not
fully indicated by the favorable results in the exhibition and catalog.
It cannot be but that an exhibition in which student peers successfully, visibly participated
would not draw a wide audience of Dawson College students and their friends and
families.
I hope that other groups and museums will notice the Montreal Oriental Rug Society
effort at Dawson College, and be encouraged to mount efforts to draw the next
generations into the traditional material that dominate their collections. There is no
reason to give up.
92. Let me end with the following acknowledgements from the catalog’s last page. I’m sure this is
Giuseppe Di Leo writing. Thanks to him and his group for making this virtual version possible.
R. John Howe
93. The next several slides are pictures of the
Vernissage and gallery installation
Giuseppe Di Leo welcomes and addresses the public at the
Vernissage.
100. Students assisting with the installation. It was
important ( and fun) to have them engaged
and collaborate in making judicious decisions
about placing and carefully handling these
fine handmade specimens. (…members felt
students had more fun!!!)