World

US museums explore the art of different faiths

December 15, 2017

By Lauren Monsen

FOR thousands of years, religious themes have inspired some of the world’s most famous artwork. Three prominent US museums are highlighting these links, with displays of the art from three different religions.

Two exhibitions — Encountering the Buddha: Art and Practice Across Asia (at the Smithsonian Institution’s Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, in Washington) and Glorious Splendor: Treasures of Early Christian Art (at the Toledo Museum of Art, in Toledo, Ohio) — along with a new gallery housing the Keir Collection of Islamic Art (at the Dallas Museum of Art), reveal how creativity has been shaped by religious imperatives.

Encountering the Buddha re-creates the interior of a Tibetan Buddhist temple, with sculptures, scrolls and flickering lamps. Visitors learn about the meanings and ritual uses of precious objects from the Buddhist world and can watch a film about the Ruwanwelisaya stupa (sacred monument) in Sri Lanka, which shows the daily rites of monks, nuns and practitioners during the December full-moon festival.

In Dallas, more than 100 pieces of Islamic art from the Keir Collection (encompassing some 2,000 artifacts produced in the Middle East, Asia and Europe over a span of 13 centuries) are now on permanent display. One standout piece is the heavily embellished, rock-crystal Fatimid ewer, acquired at auction for $4.3 million in 2008. Also on view are rare ceramics, silk textiles and illuminated manuscripts.

Glorious Splendor at the Toledo Museum of Art covers the period from about 200 to 700 CE, when the Roman Empire transitioned from a pagan society to a Christian one. Late-antiquity Roman artists designed jewelry and luxury objects for wealthy Christian patrons, and these artists’ techniques — developed during pagan times and still in use today — emphasize artistic continuity in the midst of tumultuous change.

Glorious Splendor features objects with explicitly Christian iconography, such as gold crosses and a silver plate bearing the earliest surviving image of the Communion of the Apostles (dating from 547 to 550 CE). The exhibition’s gem-studded bracelets and earrings, commissioned and worn by early Christians, signaled the growing power of the church and its followers.

Power is also evident in the exhibition’s sardonyx cameo busts of Emperor Septimus Severus and his wife, Empress Julia Domna, who was an ally of Pope Victor I.

These exhibitions trace the earliest days and enduring practices of three major religions — each one with a story as rich and varied as the religious landscape of the United States, where these faiths (and many others) flourish. — ShareAmerica


December 15, 2017
1030 views
HIGHLIGHTS
World
hour ago

Trump’s Bible endorsement raises concern in Christian religious circles

World
hour ago

Colombia expels Argentine diplomats after Milei calls Petro ‘terrorist murderer’ 

World
hour ago

Bus carrying Easter worshippers falls off cliff killing 45 people in South Africa