Thursday, April 25, 2024 Apr 25, 2024
69° F Dallas, TX
Advertisement
Visual Arts

Dallas Museum of Art Lands One of World’s Most Important Collections of Islamic Art

With the Keir Collection, the Dallas Museum of Art will now boast the third largest collection of Islamic art in North America.
|
Image

The New York Times reports that the Dallas Museum of Art will become the custodian of one of the world’s most important collections of Islamic Art, the Keir Collection. The Keir was amassed by Hungarian-born real estate magnate, Edmund de Unger, who lived in Great Britain until his death in 2011. Since 2009, the collection, which includes more than 2,000 pieces, including ceramics, weaving and miniature paintings, was on a 15-year loan to Berlin’s Pergamon Museum. As part of the loan agreement, the Berlin museum had to meet certain requirements for regular exhibition and conservation. However, the Times says that the Dallas Museum of Art’s new Senior Adviser for Islamic Art, Sabiha Al Khemir, was able to convince the family that the collection would be better served in Texas. The DMA will now house the collection for a 15-year term beginning in May.

Since arriving at the Dallas Museum of Art, Al Khemir and DMA Director Maxwell Anderson have made it clear that improving the museum’s collection of Islamic Art was a high priority. Last Monday, during a small gathering of supporters of the museum’s Islamic Cultural Initiative (ICI), Anderson said it was one of three weaknesses in the museum’s collection he would focus on, alongside European art before 1600 and Japanese and Chinese art. The museum has already received a $17 million donation from patron Marguerite Hoffman for acquiring Old Masters, and Anderson said China and Japan would be addressed through loans. With the Keir Collection, the Dallas Museum of Art will now boast the third largest collection of Islamic art in North America.

Speaking with Al Khemir for an article that will appear in the April edition of D Magazine, the curator and historian said that Texas offered a very “powerful” context for the exhibition of Islamic art. The region is home to both the fourth largest Muslim population in the country as well as former president George W. Bush. As the New York Times reports, Islamic art has enjoyed a rising profile in the United States, with the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts Houston, and the Cleveland Museum all investing in their holdings. But with the Keir, it appears as if the Dallas Museum of Art may have outdone them all. It is the latest coup in Anderson’s tenure as museum director, which has been marked by bold, high-profile gestures.

Image: Late 15th century Persian illuminated manuscript. Khosrow II in front of the palace of Shirin, illustration from the Khamsa, the epic poem ofNizami GanjaviKeir Collection Source: wikicommons

Here’s the full release:

Dallas Museum of Art Receives One of the World’s Leading Private Collections of Islamic Art

Rarely Exhibited Keir Collection Transforms DMA’s Islamic Art Holdings Into Third Largest in North America

Keir Collection to Enter the DMA’s Collection on Long-Term Loan Beginning in May 2014

Dallas, TX—February 4, 2014—The Dallas Museum of Art announced today that it will receive a long-term loan of one of the world’s largest private holdings of Islamic art, transforming the Museum’s Islamic art collection into the third largest of its kind in North America. Assembled over the course of five decades by the noted art collector Edmund de Unger (1918–2011), the Keir Collection is recognized by scholars as one of the world’s most geographically and historically comprehensive, encompassing almost 2,000 works in a range of media that span 13 centuries of Islamic art-making. This rarely exhibited collection will arrive at the DMA in May 2014 on a 15-year renewable loan, advancing the Museum’s growing focus on new models for collection-building and cultural exchange.

Named after the 18th-century British mansion where it was once housed, the Keir Collection includes textiles, carpets, ceramics, rock crystal, metalwork and works on paper. The collection’s geographic range spans from the western Mediterranean to South Asia. Under the terms of the loan agreement, the DMA will establish a new gallery space dedicated to showcasing works from the Keir Collection, and will also create the first-ever digital archive of the collection to enhance its accessibility for scholarship and public engagement.

“We are deeply grateful to the Collection’s Trustees for entrusting us with this unparalleled collection, which will enhance the DMA’s growing strengths in the area of Islamic art,” said Maxwell L. Anderson, the Museum’s Eugene McDermott Director. “The long-term loan of these magnificent works reflects the Museum’s commitment to collection-building strategies that keep important works of cultural heritage in international circulation, for the benefit of audiences both locally and globally.”

Richard de Unger, a son of the collector, said, “We are pleased that my father’s collection is being transferred to the care of a museum whose commitment to fostering cross-cultural dialogue has made it a leader among its peers. Our late father believed that Islamic Art and Culture was the bridge between the Far East and the West. It is with this concept in mind that we viewed the DMA as the ideal partner to communicate this. It is by exhibiting these rare and beautiful works that we hope to increase the understanding of the Islamic heritage and realize the enormous contribution it has made to our own cultural identity. The DMA’s innovative curatorial strategies and exemplary visitor engagement practices will ensure that these works become a cherished resource for the Museum’s diverse community in the years to come.”

This Keir Collection loan affirms the DMA’s commitment to expanding its collection through long-term loans and cultural exchanges, as a complement to its robust acquisitions program. With the 2012 appointment of Sabiha Al Khemir as the DMA’s first Senior Advisor for Islamic Art, loans of Islamic art have been a particular area of collection growth over the past year. Shortly after her appointment to the DMA, Dr. Al Khemir began conversations with the representatives of the Keir Collection regarding its future.

The Keir Collection’s arrival at the DMA exemplifies the Museum’s DMX program, which was launched in 2012 and facilitates loans of cultural objects from international organizations in exchange for the Museum sharing its expertise in conservation, exhibitions, education and new media. Texas has the fifth largest Muslim population in the United States, and until now Dallas has been the only one of the four largest metropolitan areas in the nation lacking a significant public display of the art of the Islamic world. None of the projects of DMX, including the Keir loan, involve fees, but instead are intended to foster scholarship, relationship-building and lifelong learning.

Reflecting the tastes of Edmund de Unger—a Hungarian-born lawyer who began collecting Islamic art in the 1950s—the Keir Collection is particularly strong in the fields of early lustre ceramic ware, while the rock crystal—including the recently discovered Fatimid Ewer—is perhaps the most important collection of its type outside the treasury of San Marco in Venice. Other highlights include the sumptuous silk textiles with their intricately drawn designs from the imperial workshops of 16th- and 17th-century Safavid Iran, and then there are distinctive examples of illuminated figurative manuscripts from the 14th to 17th century. With the exception of an exhibition of some 100 works at the Museum of Islamic Art in Berlin in 2007–08, most of the collection has never been exhibited in a museum setting prior to its arrival at the DMA

“With distinctive strengths across nearly every major period of Islamic cultural production, the Keir Collection is one of the most important collections of Islamic art ever assembled,” said Sabiha Al Khemir. “We are thrilled by the opportunity to showcase this remarkable collection with new exhibition strategies and scholarly research that will illuminate the rich heritage of the Islamic world.”

“The breathtaking historical and geographic scope of the Keir Collection has made it an indispensable resource for scholarship in the field of Islamic art,” said Dr. Thomas W. Lentz, the Elizabeth and John Moors Cabot Director of the Harvard Art Museums, and a noted scholar of Islamic art. “Beyond its remarkable breadth, the collection offers singular insights into important areas of Islamic art history—in particular the development of Islamic ceramics during the medieval period.”

 

Related Articles

Local News

Leading Off (4/25/24)

Do you like rain? I hope you like rain.
Image
Arts & Entertainment

VideoFest Lives Again Alongside Denton’s Thin Line Fest

Bart Weiss, VideoFest’s founder, has partnered with Thin Line Fest to host two screenings that keep the independent spirit of VideoFest alive.
Image
Local News

Poll: Dallas Is Asking Voters for $1.25 Billion. How Do You Feel About It?

The city is asking voters to approve 10 bond propositions that will address a slate of 800 projects. We want to know what you think.
Advertisement