Architecture is full of flowers, textures and patterns of nature. How do these recollections both soothe and impress the eye?
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Ceiling of Charbagh Theological School, Isfahan, Iran
© HORIZON with CCLicense
We are accustomed to seeing stylized imitations of plant and rock textures and forms decorating our homes, workplaces and just about anywhere we go. Cave stalactites have found their way into architecture as well, in the ornate form called mocárabe or muqarna. Also known in Arabic as al-halimat al-’uliya, or the overhang, mocárabe is an ornamental design that originated in northern Africa and Iran in the 10th Century, consisting of sculpted geometric shapes projecting downward from a surface.
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Sala de los Dos Hermanas, Alhambra, Granada, Spain
© Antonio M. Mora García with CCLicense
Perhaps the most famous use of this beautiful decoration in the West is in the Alhambra palace of Granada, built under the direction of the Nasrid dynasty in Spain. Above is the domed ceiling of the Sala de los dos Hermanas, the Room of the two Sisters, reaching down like an exquisite, lacy flower. The regularity and mathematical precision of the mocárabe are hypnotic, somehow soothing.
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The Sala de los Abencerrajes, Alhambra, Granada
© James Doyle with CCLicense
Nearby is the star shaped dome of the Sala de los Abencerrajes, the Room of the Abencerrages, with its stunningly placed windows throwing patterns of light and shadow over the fantastic mocárabe, which resemble images in a giant kaleidoscope.
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Sala de los Abencerraje, Alhambra
© jvwpc with CCLicense
The name of the room stems from a legend in which an unnamed sultan slew the entire Abencerrages family for an unsolicited affair between one of their number and a royal lady. He reportedly had them shut up in this beautiful room, then ordered his men to kill them. There is an evocative red rust stain in a fountain at the center of the room which may have inspired or at least given given credence to the story. Perhaps it was a fable, someone’s idea of discouraging hanky-panky in the court. One can see how imaginations might run wild in such a fantastic place.
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Looking into a corner in the Sala de los Abencerrajes
The invocation of the cave is so strong in some of these rooms that I can imagine some vampire hanging about as a bat, living it up Dracula style.
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Alhambra, Granada, Spain
© Antonio M. Mora García with CCLicense
The attention to detail borders on the overwhelming, but everything comes together in large scale patterns.
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Alhambra, Granada, Spain
© RaMaOrLi with CCLicense
The Nasrids had their mocárabe carved from the features which they decorate rather than using moulds for clay and plaster and applying the mocárabe to an underlying structure.
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Alhambra, Granada, Spain
© Anneke Bart with CCLicense
Another of Nasrid work can be seen at the Corral del Carbòn in Granada, a simple storehouse originally used for foodstuffs and later for charcoal. The work here is less delicate and fine, but it is still pretty impressive, especially considering the function of the building.
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Corral del Carbòn, Granada, Spain
© landalauts with CCLicense
Flamenco dance and theater troupes frequently perform here, as the structure combines dramatic aesthetic beauty with practical space.
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Corral del Carbòn, Granada, Spain
© landalauts with CCLicense
Mocárabe became so ingrained in Spanish culture that it was incorporated into the Palacio Real de Aranjuez in Madrid, the residence of the King of Spain, commissioned by Philip II and finished in the mid 18th century.
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Palacio Real de Aranjuez, Madrid, Spain
© Konstantinos -Boadilla del Monte with CCLicense
Islamic craftsmen and artists have been extremely creative in their use of texture and patterning in decoration, partially because figures of humans and animals were not permitted for their use on religious grounds. To portray any being which contains the breath of life can be seen as an affront to God, an attempt to create like He created, but to focus the mind in patterns is recognized as a centering and meditative practice.
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Masjed-e Shah Mosque, Isfahan, Iran
© Nevit Dilmen with CCLicense
Isfahan, in Iran, is one of the birthplaces of mocárabe, containing many fine and varied examples fashioned over centuries.
- Masjed-e Jāmé Mosque
Isfahan, Iran
©LetsGoIran with CCLicense
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Masjed-e Jāmé Mosque, Isfahan, Iran
© youngrobv with CCLicense
Islamic geometric patterns are second to none in their mathematical elegance, complexity and beauty. The mocárabe itself may have spiritual significance, perhaps symbolizing the cave in which Mohammed received the Koran.
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Ibn Youseff Mosque, Morocco
© Khalid Albaih with CCLicense
Mocárabe was originally introduced to Spain and the rest of the Iberian Peninsula by the Almoravid dynasty of Morocco, centered at Marrakesh, who ruled over southern Spain and were instrumental in defending the Islamic kingdom of Al-Andalus (Andalusia) against the Christian army of the Castilian and Aragonese. Much of the richness of southern Spanish culture is due to the influence of the highly advanced Islamic civilization which flourished there from 711 to 1492 AD. You can read more here. There is much more beauty to be found.
Image may be NSFW.
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