Stained Glass in Arab Civilization and the Interplay between Painted Images and Text: the Case of Pre-colonial Tunisia

Volume 6|Issue 24| Spring 2018 |Articles

Abstract

​This article explores the relationship between images and written texts in the pre-colonial Arab tradition of Tunisia, by focusing specifically on the art of stained glass. To this end, the role and function of writing and narrative within the craft of staining glass is examined. The aim is to understand the function of written rhetoric as one building block of the final product, which itself is an important component in the transition from a purely oral tradition to an image-based, visual culture. Through its study of narrative stained glass in Tunisia’s pre-colonial period, this paper makes a fundamental contribution to the understanding of Arab visual culture and ideas of fine arts and aesthetics in a period prior to the formation of a coherent national identity for the various Arab nation-states. 

Download Article Download Issue Cite this Article Subscribe for a year Cite this Article

is a professor of aesthetics and fine art at the University of Sfax, Tunisia, a painter, critic and researcher at the University of Toulouse, France. He received his professorship in philosophy, a degree in Art History and a doctorate in the Art Theory from the University of Tunis for a thesis entitled "The Status of Working in Art and its transformations between Sight and Theory, an attempt in the Construction of Vision." He received a prize for critical research in Sharjah 2013, for his book Binyat al-dhā’iqah wa-sulṭat al-namūdhaj fī ẓāhirat al-iqtinā’ al-fannī al-‘Arabī, min khilāli ḥālat Tūnis.

× Citation/Reference
Arab Center
Harvard
APA
Chicago