Tags (3) : Arts de l''Islam
Vingt ans après le grand chantier de la pyramide, la création du nouveau département des Arts de l’Islam au sein du musée du Louvre représente une étape décisive dans l’histoire du palais et du musée. À la fois architectural, culturel, artistique et civilisationnel, ce nouveau département convie le visiteur à un véritable voyage sensible au cœur de sa collection islamique. Carrefour de dialogue entre les cultures, il présente la face lumineuse d’une civilisation qui engloba en son sein une humanité infiniment variée et riche.
Mounia Chekhab-Abudaya est docteur en Histoire de l’Art et Archéologie islamiques de l’Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne. Elle est conservateur et responsable des collections de l'Occident musulman au Musée d'Art Islamique de Doha au Qatar et fut commissaire principal de l'exposition "Hajj - The Journey Through Art" qui s'est tenu du 09 octobre 2013 au 05 janvier 2014 à Doha. Elle l'auteur de " Mémoires du Hajj, Le pèlerinage à La Mecque vu à travers les Arts de l’Islam, la production intellectuelle et matérielle de l’époque médiévale à l’époque contemporaine." qui vient de paraître aux éditions "Cahiers de l'Islam"
Talks on Visual Culture in the Islamic World
Founded at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic in May 2020, the Virtual Islamic Art History Seminar Series (VIAHSS) has brought together a diverse community of researchers from around the world through its virtual seminars and workshops, thereby filling a new niche in academic discourse.
While travel has resumed and in-person events have begun again, the need for a forum which brings together international and intergenerational audiences in an inclusive and supportive fashion still continues to exist. We believe that this is the time to encourage researchers to connect in different ways and to include and pay attention to voices that have been heard less.
We hope to expand our understanding of Islamic art history and discuss those geographical areas and time periods that have previously been defined as marginal.
Founded at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic in May 2020, the Virtual Islamic Art History Seminar Series (VIAHSS) has brought together a diverse community of researchers from around the world through its virtual seminars and workshops, thereby filling a new niche in academic discourse.
While travel has resumed and in-person events have begun again, the need for a forum which brings together international and intergenerational audiences in an inclusive and supportive fashion still continues to exist. We believe that this is the time to encourage researchers to connect in different ways and to include and pay attention to voices that have been heard less.
We hope to expand our understanding of Islamic art history and discuss those geographical areas and time periods that have previously been defined as marginal.
Les Cahiers de l'Islam © 2012-2023. Tous droits réservés.
ISSN 2269-1995 Contact : redaction (at) lescahiersdelislam.fr |