Here is a terrific Islamic art collection, some of which you can see online, and some of which you can see explained by scholars.
It's all part of The Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art at Shangri La in Honolulu, Hawaii.
Doris Duke was the heiress of a tobacco tycoon and traveled throughout the world.
But it was her travels to Egypt, Jordan, and India in 1935 where she developed an appreciation and love for Muslim art.
Over the next 50 years, she built a large collection of Muslim art, especially with floral motifs. She even commissioned a bedroom designed with a Mughal motif.
The best part of the collection is the scholar's favorites. Here, various resident scholars analyze various pieces of art.
For example, Dr. Amanda Phillips, Fellow at the Institute of Iranian Studies at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland, explains how a velvet panel made in Bursa used silk from Iran and dyes harvested from oak trees.
In the 16th and 17th centuries, artists were using dyes from tiny parasitic insects imported from Mexico called cochineals.
One of the online exhibits allows you to view differences in tile work in Ilkanid Iran, Ottoman Turkey and Syria, and Pahlavi Iran.
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