Exhibit: Arabic lithographed books
The Islamic Studies Library is pleased to display a new exhibition featuring a fascinating selection of Arabic lithographed books from the Islamic Rare Books Collection.
Invented in Germany in 1796, the printing technique called 鈥渓ithography鈥 remained a subsidiary method for book production in Europe, but quickly spread to the Muslim world. Lithographic printing consists of writing by hand on a smooth limestone plate, on which ink is then applied, to produce a printed page. The word "lithography" comes from the ancient Greek "lithos" (位喂胃慰蟼) meaning 鈥渟tone鈥.
From the nineteenth century until the mid-twentieth century, lithography coexisted in the Muslim world with manuscripts production as the most common technique for printing.
There are a number of reasons for lithography鈥檚 acceptance and development in the Muslim world including:
- it requires the skills of calligraphers and copyists making it less of a threat than movable type by incorporating these workers
- it is more versatile than printing by movable type in terms of the production of designs, specifically in the reproduction of the particularities of Arabic calligraphy
- it produces texts very similar to the look and feel manuscripts particularly in terms of the textual, graphic, and artistic layout
- it is portable, easy to operate, and cost-efficient
The Islamic Rare Books Collection includes many examples of lithographed books in Arabic, Persian, Ottoman Turkish and Urdu dated from the eighteenth century until the mid-twentieth century. The聽Arabic lithographed books exhibition displays sixteen items encompassing the different periods, calligraphic styles, graphic designs, and publishing houses from the Muslim world. In short, the lithographs exhibited recount a brief history of the evolution of lithography in the Muslim world.
The exhibition is accessible in the Islamic Studies Library during opening hours from April 1st to September 30th 2014. Free entrance.