Originally used
to illustrate classic texts and manuscripts, the art of the miniature was
introduced to Central Asia by the Persians. Their somewhat subsidiary status as
mere visual accompaniment is perhaps what al...
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Originally used
to illustrate classic texts and manuscripts, the art of the miniature was
introduced to Central Asia by the Persians. Their somewhat subsidiary status as
mere visual accompaniment is perhaps what allowed them to survive in an Islamic
society where visual representations of living things were considered
sacrilege. Narrative in nature, each miniature tells a story through symbols
and no detail is extraneous; “read” from right to left and bottom to top,
miniatures record historical events and local folklore, and are delicate
testaments to their time.
Curiously enough, the term “miniature” doesn’t relate to the diminutive
size of the illustration, but instead references the red-orange pigment called
“minima,” popular with Persian and Mughal miniaturists. Set in a flat plane,
with no attempt at realism, miniatures were supposed to be painted from the
perspective of a minaret, which is why they most often depict their subjects
straight on from the side, or from above.
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