US $ 95 UK £ 50
March 2010 HARDCOVER
Museum Publication
ISBN 13: 978-1-55595-355-3 ISBN: 1-55595-355-7 432 pages 9 x 12 in. 23 x 31 cm. 626 color plates
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Islamic Glass in The Corning Museum of Glass, Volume One
David Whitehouse
♦ Contains more than 595 objects beautifully photographed
and published for the first time
♦ This first volume of a three-part series on rare early Islamic
glass is of interest to art historians and scholars of Middle
Eastern history
The methods of finishing glass by cutting and polishing
first began in the regions of the Mediterranean in the first
and second century B.C. during the Roman Empire.
Within the next 200 years, these finishing shops were also
producing glass both cut and with details engraved into the surface. Another
technique, wheel-cutting glass, was also practiced by the Romans
and their contemporaries, the Sasanians, in Iran and Iraq. However, with
the fall of the Roman Empire in the fifth century A.D. these methods
all declined and eventually disappeared from the Mediterranean but
were sustained in Western Asia. By the eighth and ninth centuries, both
cutting and scratch engraving were part of the thriving repertoire of
glassmakers in the central Islamic lands.
In the extensive collection of cut and engraved glass presented in this
volume, almost all the ornaments date between the eighth and eleventh
centuries and trace their origin to present-day Egypt, Iraq, and Iran. The
collection includes dishes, bowls, cups beakers, goblets, jars, pitchers,
and ewers that have been newly cleaned and restored and show prevailing
themes of plants, birds, and scenes from daily life. Together with an
essay by David Whitehouse, executive director and curator of Ancient
and Islamic Glass at The Corning Museum of Glass, this volume serves
to illuminate and add to the study of the techniques and evolution of
ancient glass in the Middle East.
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