Studies in Islamic and Later Indian Art from the Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Harvard University Art Museums

Rochelle L. Kessler, Mary Anderson McWilliams, Oya Pancaroglu, David J. Roxburgh

80 pp., 28 illus., 13 in color. 2001

ISBN: 1-891771-22-1 Paper. $15.

This volume initiates a series of studies on works of art in the collections of the Harvard University Art Museums. Essays examine the paradoxical mission of museums to preserve and exhibit works of art that in many cases are damaged by exposure to light; portraits of Mughal rulers with holy men, which were often part of a complex effort by conquering rulers and their successors to establish and strengthen the legitimacy of their reigns; Iranian drawing and the distinctions Persian preface writers made between drawing and painting; and Samanid epigraphic pottery, focusing on the type of inscription that constitutes the predominant—and sometimes the only--form of decoration on a group of ceramics from medieval Iran and Central Asia.

Mary McWilliams is the Arthur M. Sackler Museum's Norma Jean Calderwood Curator of Islamic and Later Indian Art. Rochelle Kessler is assistant curator of South and Southeast Asian art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art. David Roxburgh is associate professor of Islamic art, Harvard University. Oya Pancaroglu is research fellow in Islamic art history, the Oriental Institute, University of Oxford.

Copyright ©2003 President and Fellows of Harvard College | Terms of Use