Fall 2026 Asian Humanities UN2800 section 001

Arts of Islam, 700-1000 CE

Arts of Islam, 700-1000 C

Call Number 13044
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Avinoam Shalem
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

This lecture course offers a comprehensive and chronological overview of the major masterpieces of art and architecture of the Muslim world between circa 700-1000 AD. Topics concerning the rise of Arabic as the official language of the new Muslim Empire and the aesthetic transformation it went from script to calligraphy, the shaping of sacred spaces and liturgical objects, rulers’ iconographies and urban designs, as well as daily-life objects, will be discussed. Mecca, Madina, Jerusalem, Damascus, Fustat (old Cairo), Qayrawan, Cordoba, Baghdad, Samarra, Balkh, Bukhara and early Fatimid Cairo are the major playgrounds to illustrate particular moments of shifting powers and aesthetic paradigms in the early days of the Muslim empire, suggesting a more differentiate picture of the arts of Islam in the age of imagining a world-wide empire. The past narratives for these regions will be critically presented by both looking at the medieval sources and the modern historiographies for these regions and by highlighting the varied ideologies at play. Taking this critical vein of studying the arts of the early Muslim age, past narratives will be reconsidered, while enhancing our awareness to the complicated, if not sometimes manipulated, processes of giving works of arts meanings and values.

Web Site Vergil
Department Art History and Archaeology
Enrollment 0 students (60 max) as of 9:05PM Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Subject Asian Humanities
Number UN2800
Section 001
Division Interschool
Open To Columbia College, Engineering:Undergraduate, General Studies
Section key 20263AHUM2800V001