Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 March 2016
The terms “Islamic” and ‘Arab” are not ideal instruments for classifying modern or contemporary art, for they are meta-categories that can variously encompass Muslims and non-Muslims, and Arabs and non-Arabs. Nonetheless, as historians of modern art in Islamic regions, we seem to have inherited a longstanding commitment to Islamic art as an epistemologically unique practice that produced limitless abstract patterns and other “non-Western” visual expression. It is time to move beyond such overburdened lineages. In this paper, I aim to historicize the formulations of a specific Arabo-Islamic aesthetic that emerged in the 1970s. I do so by a study of a single event and its metacultural claims: the World of Islam Festival held in London in 1976. The Festival projected optimistic countercultural options for art and civilization that remain instructive today, while the complexity of its organizing structures demonstrates the limitations of the West/rest paradigm in interpreting its artistic products.
1 “Muslims to Take Over ICA” was a headline for a promotional article about a “World of Islam jamboree” held at the Institute of Contemporary Arts gallery in London in 1971. See Design 272 (August 1971), p. 17. The 1971 jamboree is a precursor to the 1976 events I discuss here. I use the phrase for my title because of its pithy promotion of the radical difference of Muslims and their aesthetics, as ready to overturn British institutional orders.
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4 Ibid.
5 Ibid.
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15 The artists in the list of attendees include Mamdouh Kachlan, Hatem el Mekki, Zoubeir Turki, Hedi Turki, and Joumana Husseini.
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