The National - News

Scholar explores the science of stars in Islam

- Gareth Smyth

At age 16, Christiane Gruber set off alone to Tunisia from high school in the United States to learn Arabic and explore the North African country. This was bold, even for a youngster who had moved across the world with a father in the Swiss diplomatic service.

Looking back a few decades later, Gruber recalls the stirrings that would lead her to become a professor at the University of Michigan and an authority on the history of Islamic art. “For me, even then, it was intellectu­al curiosity, aesthetic appeal and the challenge of learning a culture and tradition that were unfamiliar,” she says.

Gruber now spends her summer between Istanbul, where she has an apartment “close to my research”, and Geneva, where she grew up speaking French, German, Italian and English. Only two minutes into our conversati­on, the energy behind her prolific output becomes apparent. This work dates back to her undergradu­ate thesis at Princeton University on 15th-century Mamluk metalware and a doctoral thesis at the University of Pennsylvan­ia on the Prophet Mohammed’s ascension in Islamic art and literature.

Gruber’s latest project, an exhibition she co-curated at the Aga Khan Museum in Toronto, titled The Moon: A Voyage Through Time, celebrates the role of the Moon in Muslim civilisati­ons – whether in time-keeping, faith or navigating trade routes. Gruber was brought into the project by resident curator Ulrike Al-Khamis, who wanted to mark the 50th anniversar­y of the Moon landings, and so the pair set about assembling and arranging exhibits into themes such as “The Moon as Wonder” and “The Moon as Beauty”.

Gruber’s expertise in art history helped establish accurate contexts. “To give one example: the ‘Moon as Knowledge’ covers scientific material,” she says. “Today we wouldn’t put astronomy in the same section as astrology, but in the medieval period in Islam there was one term for both, ‘the science of the stars’.

“The goal was understand­ing the stars because they affected your destiny. Astronomy was a tool for the higher science of astrology,” she says.

“An astrolabe was used for scientific purposes – but the instrument itself was made beautifull­y.”

The centrepiec­e of the exhibition, which will be removed this week but is available to view online, is a five-metre Moon by British sculptor Luke Jerram, which children can survey through a telescope. “People are interested in the Moon, whatever their faith or age,” says Gruber. “It captures almost everybody’s imaginatio­n.”

Perhaps this illustrate­s why Gruber enjoys teaching. “I’ve always loved sharing what I know, and empowering the younger generation, showing them how to think and not necessaril­y what to think.”

Gruber is both a specialise­d scholar – she learnt Farsi and Turkish after Arabic – and ecumenical in her approach to art history. In 2016, she was both co-curator of the Power and Protection: Islamic Art and the Supernatur­al at the Ashmolean in Oxford and editor of Islamic Architectu­re on the Move: Motion and Modernity. “I like to define terms in the most capacious way possible,” she says.

“I don’t like limits. The mosque is probably the chief architectu­ral manifestat­ion of Islam. But it can be a pattern, an ornament, a word written in script, a painting, a knotted design in a carpet. For me, Islamic architectu­re is any structure or architectu­ral element

that makes a conscienti­ous nod to what is conceived of as Islamic, as of Muslim-majority lands.”

This covers architectu­re not only in Islamic heartlands, she says, but also in Hawaii, the Americas and New Zealand. It includes the eco-mosque in Cambridge, England, where with solar panels, “the mosque becomes literally a place of enlightenm­ent distributi­ng energy both real and metaphoric­al to its community”, she says.

Gruber has had two books published in the past year. The Praisewort­hy One: The Prophet Mohammed in Islamic Texts and Images is her third as the sole author. She has also edited The Image Debate: Figural Representa­tion in Islam

and Across the World, which is due to be published on August 15, with 13 essays and about 200 illustrati­ons. The Image

Debate, says Gruber, narrates discussion and disagreeme­nt over representa­tion found throughout cultures and religions across the world, not as often supposed simply within Islam, hence the book includes specialist­s on Byzantium, pre-Islamic Central Asia, African Islam, Indonesia, India and Judaism.

These days, the scholar retains the appreciati­on of Islamic art that lured her 16-yearold self. “I very much like the 12th-century [Seljuk] standing figure illustrate­d in my essay, which is monumental and minimalist,” Gruber says. As for her next steps, she envisages a “new field of scholarly enquiry” she’s calling “eco-Islamic art”.

“I’m writing several essays exploring visual, material, and architectu­ral practices that come together to craft environmen­tally centred forms of Islamic piety. In particular, I’m looking at how landscapes, rocks, trees, water and animals enliven and embellish human life in Muslim-majority countries.”

 ?? Alu Manji ?? Above and above right, The Moon: A Voyage Through Time exhibition in Toronto
Alu Manji Above and above right, The Moon: A Voyage Through Time exhibition in Toronto
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Co-curator Christiane Gruber
Co-curator Christiane Gruber

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates