The Sultan's Garden: The Blossoming of Ottoman Art
Selvedge Foundation
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The Sultan’s Garden is a visual feast and scholarly exploration of the floral style that came to define Ottoman court art from the mid-16th century onwards. Drawing on lush motifs—stylised tulips, carnations, hyacinths, roses and rosebuds—the book traces how these botanical forms became the empire’s signature ornament, adorning everything from textiles and tiles to manuscript illumination.
Lavishly illustrated with full-colour examples, the volume reveals how this floral vocabulary was not only decorative, but a deliberate expression of identity and power—exported from Istanbul’s royal workshops into village art, nomadic weaving, and beyond. The narrative also notes a key moment of transformation: the rise of Kara Memi, a court artist whose work helped codify the “brand” of Ottoman floral art, and whose influence of stylised bulbs continues to echo in art and design today.
About the Author
Walter B. Denny is a respected scholar of Islamic art and architecture, whose research spans ornament, symbolic form, and design across the Middle East. His detailed understanding of pattern, colour and historical context lends precision to the analyses presented here. Sumru Belger Krody is a curator and expert in textiles and decorative arts, affiliated with the Textile Museum in Washington, D.C.; her curatorial insight enriches the book’s engagement with material culture and artistic techniques.
Publication date: 2012
Publisher: The Textile Museum
Pages: 272
ISBN: 9780874050370
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