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| Traditional Turkish Handicrafts |
HISTORY · Textile-weaving The Turkish arts of textile-making and carpet-weaving flourished particularly in Anatolia where some of the world’s finest carpets were woven in centers such as Konya, Usak, and Bergama during the Seljuk, Feudal, and Ottoman periods. Choice examples of carpets, kilims, and other exquisite textiles are to be found in the Museum of Turkish and Islamic Arts and in the Vakiflar Museum of Carpets and Kilims (both in Istanbul) as well as in a number of other museums in Turkey. Fabric-weaving is another textile art that has been practiced and developed in Turkey for centuries. Fabrics also provide a medium for the arts of embroidery, hand-painting, and block-printing, as is eloquently testified by examples in museums and private collections around the country. Two important examples of 13th-century Turkish fabrics are to be found in the Lyon Musees des Tissus and in the treasury of the Siegburg Cathedral. During Ottoman times, cities such as Bursa, Bilecik, and Üsküdar were centers where the world’s finest silks, velvets, cottons, and woolens were woven, in the collection of sultans’ garments in the Topkapi Sarayi Museum. There are rich examples of fabrics woven in Bursa to order for the court according to designs executed by the artists of the court studios.
Wood and stone carving are traditional Turkish handicrafts that have their widest range of applications in architecture, but they have also been practiced as independent arts in their own right. Among the Seljuks, woodworking was developed taking advantage of the materials available in Anatolia and the preferred woods such as walnut, ebony, boxwood, pear, and hornbeam that were durable and would withstand the effects of moisture, temperature, and vermin. The Seljuks were expert in the techniques of carving, inlaying, latticework, and openwork. Ottoman woodworking was a direct heir of that of the Seljuks but to it, they added the techniques of inlaying wood surfaces with mother-of-pearl, ivory, tortoise-shell, and similar materials. The Ottomans were also quite accomplished in the arts of decorating wooden surfaces with painting and lacquer. Metalworking as a Turkish handicraft immediately brings to mind objects made from precious metals such as gold and silver as well as from more mundane metals such as copper, brass, and iron. During the Seljuk period, Turkish metalworking flourished in the Konya and Artuklu regions in particular. A wide range of formsĞlamps, trays, mortars, candlesticks, braziers, mirrors, door-knockers, and kitchen utensils of every imaginable kindĞwere produced and examples from this period are to be found in museum collections (Museum of Turkish and Islamic Arts, Topkapi Sarayi Museum, Konya Mevlana Museum) and private collections both in Turkey and abroad. Works were made using a variety of techniques such as beating, counter-sinking, lathing, and riveting and were also richly decorated with the techniques of chasing, intaglio, relief, inlaying, openwork, cutting, niello, and filigree. The manufacturing and decorating techniques of the Seljuks continued during the Ottoman period but there was also an expansion in the areas of application with metal being successfully employed for such varied uses ranging from weapons to jewelry and from kitchen utensils to railings and screens. Under the Ottomans, metal-related occupations such as jewelry-making, iron-working, copper-working, casting, and gilding were widespread and many masterpieces were produced.
Shying away from figurative art out of perceived religious considerations, calligraphy provided Muslim artists everywhere with an opportunity to express themselves in two dimensions. Turkish calligraphers were the inventors of a host of new and original styles that gave them much scope for creativity. The celebrated school of Turkish calligraphers, beginning with Yakutü’l Mustasimi in the 13th century, continued with Seyh Hamdullah of Amasya, Ahmet Karahisari, Dervis Ali, Hafiz Osman, Mustafa Rakim, Mustafa Izzet, Ismail Zühdü, Mahmut Celaledidn, and Sami Efendi. The art still thrives and in the last century alone we have seen such illustrious calligraphers as Tugrakes Hakki, Emin Yazici, Necmeddin Okyay, Kamil Akdik, Hamid Aytaç, Halim Özyazici, and Emin Barin. The manuscripts whose texts were so lovingly written out by calligraphers were also illustrated with miniatures executed in court studios and workshops. In the skilled hands of artists such as Sinan Bey, Nigari, Nakkas Osman, Hakkas Hasan Pasa, Nakkas Kalender, and Levni, miniature-painting attained an unparalled degree of perfection. Illumination was the third stage in this art and involved embellishing works such as manuscripts, calligraphic plates, documents, and bindings with gold and other-colored decorations. Some of the luminaries of the Turkish school of manuscript illumination were Baba Nakkas, Karamemi, Sah Kulu, and Ali Üsküdari. More recent practitioners of the art include Muhsins Demironat and Rikkat Kunt. The final step in the preparation of a book is its binding and Turkish craftmen produced masterpieces in the art of making tooled-leather bookbindings and also excelled in binding books in a variety of fabrics as well as marbled paper (another area in which Turkish artists have excelled) and sometimes employing gems such as emeralds, rubies, diamonds, and turquoises. Outstanding examples of such works are to be found in the Topkapi Sarayi Museum Library, the Museum of Turkish and Islamic Arts, the Süleymaniye Library, and in private collections. Distinguished examples of Turkish calligraphy and manuscript books are also to be found in museum and libraries around the world. Traditional Turkish handicrafts are included in the academic curricula and programs of a number of institutions in Turkey, of which the University of Mimar Sinan is the foremost, but also in the fine arts faculties of the Marmara and Dokuz Eylül universities. They are also being taught and practiced in private studios and schools and their practical application is still alive and well in many parts of Anatolia. SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY Ilhami Turan
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