Dr. Adam Sammut explores Islamic themes in Flemish Baroque art, shedding light on cultural identity studies. Dr. Nil Palabiyik discusses Ali Bey's role in bridging East-West cultural gaps through music and translation. The podcast delves into the intricate interconnectedness of Eastern and Western influences in art, education, and diplomacy during the 17th century.
Rubens incorporated Islamic themes in diverse art forms, reflecting cultural exchanges and influences in his works.
Alibay symbolized cultural bridging between East and West, highlighting adaptation complexities and the longing for homeland after conversion.
Deep dives
Rubens Explored Islamic Themes in His Artwork
Rubens, a Flemish Baroque painter, incorporated Islamic themes in his art, delving into works connected with the Siege of Tunis and reviving it in his art. His exploration extended to costume, portraiture, and copies of Persian and Turkish miniatures, showcasing a diverse range of influences.
Alibay: A Bridge Between East and West
Alibay, a 17th-century Ottoman musician captured and taken to Constantinople from Poland, symbolized cultural bridging between East and West. His compositions and background highlighted the complexities of cultural adaptation and the longing for his homeland after converting to Islam.
Ottoman Empire and European Connections
The 17th-century Ottoman Empire, a superpower of its time, engaged in conflicts and cultural exchanges with Europe. Regions like Hungary were caught between Ottoman and Austrian influences, with reminders like Turkish baths in present-day Budapest. European painters like Rubens navigated these cultural interactions from afar.
Challenges and Revelations in Research
Scholars like Adam and Nil faced practical barriers in accessing and interpreting historical manuscripts and paintings. The complex multilingual, multidisciplinary nature of their studies revealed nuances in understanding cultural interactions between Europe and the Ottoman Empire in the early modern period.
The Flemish Baroque painter Peter Paul Rubens produced around 1,500 artworks, and a new research project explores the Islamic themes in his art. Dr Adam Sammut discusses why the Ottoman Empire’s influence on Rubens has been at the periphery of research, and what it reveals about the early modern understanding of cultural identity. Dr Nil Palabiyik has been researching the artist, musician and linguist Ali Bey who was taken as a war captive from Poland and placed at the palace school in Constantinople. He became a key figure at court, bridging cultural differences between east and west through his collections of Ottoman music and translation of the bible.
Dr Adam Sammut is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in History of Art at the University of York. His current project is called ‘Rubens and Islam: Global exchange and European identity in early modern Antwerp.
Dr Nil Palabiyik is Lecturer in Medieval and Early Modern Studies at Queen Mary University of London. In 2023 she was awarded the Philip Leverhulme prize and is the author of ‘Silent Teachers: Turkish Books and Oriental Learning in Renaissance Europe, 1544-1680’.
Dr Sarah Jilani is a Lecturer in English at City, University of London, looking at post-colonial world literatures and film and was a New Generation Thinker on the scheme run by the BBC and Arts and Humanities Research Council to put research on the radio.
This New Thinking episode of the Arts & Ideas podcast was made in partnership with the Arts and Humanities Research Council, part of UKRI. You can find more on BBC Sounds and in a collection on Radio 3’s Free Thinking programme website called New Research with discussions on topics ranging from disability in music and theatre to why we talk
Producer: Martha Owen
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