Panel

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Panel

Morocco, late 14th-15th century
Wood
Wood, carved and painted
5 3/4 x 41 in. (14.6 x 104.14 cm)
The Madina Collection of Islamic Art, gift of Camilla Chandler Frost (M.2002.1.752)
Not currently on public view

Curator Notes

...
The Berber-descended Marinid rulers of Morocco (1244–1465) were important patrons of art and architecture who often hired immigrant craftsmen from Islamic Spain to decorate the religious monuments they commissioned. The result is a series of mosques and madrasas (religious schools) with interior walls covered by intricate stuccowork, tile mosaics, and meticulously carved wood paneling of a distinctively Spanish inspiration. This wood plank, which likely comes from one such Marinid religious institution, is probably the lower half of a two-board panel, with a repeated Arabic inscription (the word "al-Yumn" or prosperity, written forward and backward), vegetal designs, and a seashell motif enclosed within cusped arches.
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Bibliography

  • Lo Terrenal y lo Divino: Arte Islámico siglos VII al XIX Colección del Museo de Arte del Condado de Los Ángeles. Santiago: Centro Cultural La Moneda, 2015.

  • Komaroff, Linda. Beauty and Identity: Islamic Art from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2016.