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                The Art of ​

Arabic Calligraphy

Arabic calligraphy was destined to become a major art, indeed, the principal art for centuries. Not until the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries did painting catch up with it...Its own inherent plastic qualities are conducive to setting up rhythms through repetitions... If proof is needed that Arabian calligraphy possesses aesthetic qualities independent of meanings expressed, there is the fact that it was used purely as decoration in Byzantine works, in early Italian paintings, and even on the facades of medieval French churches,  as at Le Puy; the characters are generally only pseudo-Arabic, which is good evidence that the artists who devised these inscriptions were responsive to the beauty of the pure forms of Arabian calligraphy​.
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A. Papadopoulo, Islam and Muslim Art (1979)

The ï»¿Gallery includes Arabic scripts in Thuluth, Naskh, Kufi, Diwani, Jeli-Diwani, Ta'aleeq, Riqa'a, as well as Muhaqaq, Tughra'a, and Early Thuluth.  Most of the texts are selected verses from the holy Qura'an, in accordance with the old calligraphic tradition.

Copyright Protection:  No part of this site may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or printed, including copying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without a written and signed permission by the artist.

​Gallery

To start viewing, point out to either of the arrows, and click on any image to see it bigger.

© 2012 by SAMANTA JONES

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