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Cairo: Then and Now
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Archibald Creswell: Biographical Notes
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This article originally
appeared in Al-Ahram Weekly,
18 December, 2003
Creswell's
Cairo
By S. Abdallah Schleifer
Destined to live surrounded by beauty, saturated as it were by beauty
, there are perhaps those who remain unmoved by detached, precise academic
appreciations of their surroundings. Certainly it seemed so for me, living
at peace in the old walled city of Jerusalem from the summer of 1965,
living in the Tinkaziya, a Mamluk jewel that was effectively the gatehouse
for the Bab al Silsila entryway within the wall of the Haram al Sharif,
a listed monument of sturdy exquiteness which looked out upon the Dome
of the Rock, and the Mount of Olives.
I had stumbled upon K.A.C. Creswell's Early Muslim Architecture and would
periodically attempt to follow Creswell's meticulous descriptions and
precise architectural histories but at the time my mind responded only
to the overwhelming medieval Islamic urbanscape wherein I lived and slept
and walked, at times almost in a daze. I was so overwhelmed by poetic
metaphor - by this tangible Jerusalem, the metaphor if not the reflection
of The Celestial City -- that I had little patience to appreciate either
Creswell's text and extraordinary scale drawings much less the man himself.
What
did remain with me however was Creswell's observation that Jerusalem --
the old walled city -- was indeed the most perfectly preserved Muslim
medieval city in the world. My travels, before and after the Jerusalem
interlude, to wonderful cities like Fez, Meknes, Marrakesh, Damascus,
Istanbul and Cairo ( I would not think to even mention Beirut or Amman
- my journalistic base of operations when I left Jerusalem one year after
the Israeli occupation) convinced me of the truth of that particular observation.
So
it was, in a sense, as one who had been exiled from a center of celestial
beauty that I eventually relocated to Cairo in 1974 to revive the NBC
News bureau here. But out of nostalgia for that earlier state, and already
a devotee of Mamluk arts -- apart from the Dome of the Rock and Al Aqsa
mosque and a few other structures, including the Ottoman walls, the walled
city of Jerusalem is overwhelmingly an Ayyubi and Mamluk creation - I
would spend considerable amounts of whatever spare time I had wandering
around what we today call Islamic Cairo
Inevitably I became a visitor -disciple at the late afternoon teas hosted
by Hassan Fathy in his amazing Mamluk quarters adjacent to the Sultan
Hassan Madressa-Mosque and The Rifai Mosque, and made much use of the
AUC Press edition of A Practical Guide to Islamic Monuments by Richard
Parker and Robin Sabin, since 1985 continuously revised by Caroline Williams
and now published as Islamic Monuments in Cairo: A Practical Guide. It
was nostalgic in the sense that Islamic monuments in Cairo are frequently
to be found in devastated surroundings of urban decay and new building
that is at best insensitive or ambivalent in relation to the ambience
of a traditional Muslim city and at worst - and this is an increasing
danger over recent decades - in flagrant and often vulgar violation of
that spirit. But there are still blocks to be walked that sustain the
medieval urbanscape and correctly site individual buildings, while those
buildings themselves, whether correctly sited or not, remain marvels The
Practical Guide, as old-time users still refer to it, remains the work
I unfailingly recommend to any newcomer to Cairo who wants to walk through
the experience as much as read about it.
But when one reads Caroline Williams' acknowledgements or consulted her
bibliography for further readings it became gradually apparent to someone
like myself, with no familiarity with the scholarly literature, that K.A.C.
Creswell is the starting point for all guides to and research on the Islamic
monuments of Cairo. Creswell's vast collection of more than 10,000 photographs
and negatives, many accompanied by his own careful research notes, not
to mention 5,000 rare books and his own pioneering writing in this field,
is in Cairo , at the American University's (AUC's) Rare Books and Special
Collections Library.As Philip Croom, director of that library, says in
his notes tor the catalogue of the exhibition " Creswell's Cairo:
Then and Now", that Creswell based his meticulous reseach "
on clearly verifiable facts, exact measurements, chronological accuracy,
extensive photographic documentation and a thorough study of the history
of buildings and their builders. At the same time he acquired every book
of merit on the subject that he could find. The result is an exceptional
collection of first editions and rare tomes, journals and maps in addition
to his own scale drawings and reams of descriptive and photographic documentation."
a
But
the most telling experience of my first year in Cairo was to stumble --
in the company of a friend fluent in Arabic and a devoted book collector
-- upon the original but seemingly vanished two volume edition of The
Mosques of Egypt, prepared by a general committee formed in 1943 of high
ranking officials and scholars ,overwhelmingly Egyptian save for Creswell
and the former director of Reproduction Offices of the Survey of Egypt.
It was a committee on which Sir Archibald obviously played the leading
role. This massive two volume work was superbly bound and printed by The
Survey of Egypt, Giza in 1949 and in its own way uis a monment to the
quality of work was once obtainable in Egypt and that will hopefully be
attained again. It was not on display at the little bookstore not far
from Al - Azhar where we stumbled upon it since the volumes, which could
be viewed as some sort of testimony to the cultural product of pre-revolutionary
Egypt, had been removed from the market. But not before the original Preface
and Introduction, which I have not seen, was removed from volume one and
replaced with a new one dated June 1954
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The new introduction was signed by the revolutionary government's first
Minister of Waqfs, the Azhari Sheikh Ahmad Hassan Al-Bakouri, but even
this substitution was deemed insufficient dilution of the obvious pre-revolutionary
origins of of the magnificent work which was eventually withdrawn from
the market and stored away in a government warehouse where, as so often
happens, discreet "private initiatives" by those with access
to the warehouse guaranteed a clandestine supply of the books. Years later
new and presumably pirated, editions published in Beirut and London, if
I recall correctly, appeared on the market and became available though
the binding of these new editions simply cannot approach the original
work even if the overall reproduction is of good quality. In one of those
ironies that can happen in Cairo, the far superior, original black market
edition was far less costly than the pirated one produced abroad. Each
volume is 17 inches high by 13 inches wide (33cm by 44.5 cm) and contains
large scale photogravure plates, arranged in chronological order, so that
the reader, by turning them over, can, to quote Creswell "review
the growth and evolution of Muslim architecture in Egypt." Each plate
is accompanied by a descriptive text, sufficient to give the essential
facts concerning each mosque while the second volume contains magnificent
detailed photographic sequences organized by category-- minarets, domes,
lamps, chandeliers, types of capitals and columns (which are drawn), door
knockers, and stucco window grills.
By
the time this massive work was published Creswell's reputation - based
upon a career that had begun during World War I, and its immediate aftermath
when he served as a surveyor of monuments in Palestine and Syria --as
the founding father of the modern scholarly discipline we know as the
History of Islamic Art and Architecture, had been established. As George.Scanlon
,Professor of Islamic Art and Architecture at the American University
in Cairo, notes,"his interest in Muslim architecture was quickened
and upon his return to Egypt in 1920 he commenced his life long dedicated
endeavor" that ended with his death in 1974.
The Preface to the Mosques of Egypt, written by Creswell (who became Sir
Archibald when he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 1970), says it all:
"
Cairo possesses a most remarkable series of Muslim monuments, running
unbroken from the ninth to the nineteenth century. In the latter respct
it is unique; other cities, such as Damascus possess a large number of
monuments but some centuries are not represented at all."
Now
40 of Creswells's black and white photographs of Islamic monuments in
Cairo will be exhibited along side recently taken color photographs of
the same monuments from approximately identical perspectives, in a joint
exhibit at the AUC Sony Gallery and the Rare Books Library, to be opened
on Monday, 22 December by Zahi Hawass, secretary general of the Supreme
Council of Antiquities. Among the guests joining Dr. Hawass, are His Excellency
the Grand Muft,i Sheikh Dr.Ali al Joum'a, and His Excellency Sir Derick
Plumbly, British Ambassador to Egypt.
The Creswell photographs come from the Creswell Collection. The contemporary
color photographs which match pictures taken by Creswell anywhere from
50 to 70 years ago, were taken by a Venezuelan team commissioned by the
Islamic Art Network , and the show, including the modest catalogue that
will be made available to visitors, is the result of close collaboration
between the Rare Books Library, the Islamic Art Network and the Sony Gallery
for Photography.
The
Islamic Art Network was established by the Thesaurus Islamicus Foundation
two years ago to serve researchers in the field and to acquaint those
who are interested in the subject with Islamic art and architecture. Its
website www.islamic-art.org provides a digital Library with two sections,
the Comite de Conservation des Monuments del'Art Arab bulletins and a
photo archive of Islamic buildings in Cairo, including a virtual reproduction
of the AUC -IAN exhibit that opens on Monday. The Thesaurus Islamicus
Foundation is a non-profit organization established to advance, support
and promote the protection, preservation, study and dissemination of Isamic
intellectual, cultural and artistic patrimony. For more information about
the Foundation see www.thesaurus.islamicus.li
Much
help in putting the exhibit together was provided by the Islamic Art historian
Christel Kessler who worked as Sir Archibald's assistant. The exhibition.,
according to Dr. Kessler, is a "most interestingly conceived exhibition
honouring the memory of Professor Creswell and an often under-rated part
of his historic documentation." Kessler, who now lives in Cambridge.,
UK will be attending the opening ceremonies.
The
writer is director of the Sony Gallery and the Adham Center for Television
Journalism at AUC and the author of The Fall of Jerusalem (Monthly Review
Press, New York, 1971
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