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Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art Culture Design Honolulu Hi 96816

Islamic-manner mansion in Hawaii

The Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Civilization & Design is housed in the onetime home of Doris Duke near Diamond Head just outside Honolulu, Hawaii. Information technology is now owned and operated equally a public museum of the arts and cultures of the Islamic world by the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art (DDFIA). Guided tours depart from the Honolulu Museum of Art, which operates the tours in co-operation with DDFIA.

Construction of Shangri La took place from 1936 to 1938,[one] [2] after Doris Duke'south 1935 honeymoon which took her through the Islamic world. For nearly lx years, Duke commissioned and collected artworks for the space, somewhen forming a collection of over 4,000 objects. The structure was designed by Marion Sims Wyeth. An creative reflection of the construction of Shangri La tin can be found in Kiana Davenport's novel Vocal of the Exile.[iii]

The edifice was opened to the public as a museum, the Shangri La Museum for Islamic Art, Design & Culture, in 2002.[four]

Collections and exhibitions [edit]

The Shangri La Museum for Islamic Art, Design & Culture displays a wide-ranging collection of art, furnishings, and congenital-in architectural elements from Islamic republic of iran, Morocco, Turkey, Kingdom of spain, Syria, Egypt, and India - among others. Aureate and painted ceilings from Kingdom of morocco, bright ceramics from Iran (including the but consummate lusterware Ilkhanid mihrab[five] in North America), painted wooden interiors from Syrian arab republic, pierced metalwork and vibrant textiles from Spain to India (including a magnificent pair of shaped carpets, made for the Mughal emperor) are amid the many highlights. Its multiple buildings on the campus also include The Playhouse (a reduced-scale version of the 17th century Chehel Sotoun in Esfahan, Iran, now used for public programs and artist residencies).

The outdoor landscaping has a number of gardens, including a formal Mughal garden inspired by the Shalimar Gardens, as well equally terraced h2o features, a Hawaiian fishpond, tropical gardens and a waterfall, and fabulous vistas of the Pacific Sea.

The museum also hosts ii visual artists per year for onsite exhibitions, workshops, and/or lectures. Recently-featured artists have included Hayv Kahraman, Faig Ahmed, Bahia Shehab, and Reem Bassous.

Public tours and programs [edit]

Tours of Shangri La originate at the Honolulu Museum of Fine art, and tickets must be reserved well in advance. Individual access to the museum is not granted.

Tours last about two and a-half hours, with ane and a-half hours onsite at Shangri La. Tours feature the public rooms of the museum, and portions of the grounds: including the Entry Courtyard with Bahia Shehab'due south My People mural, the Mughal Garden, the covered lānai overlooking the Pacific Bounding main, and views of the Playhouse/pool/water cascades.

The Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture & Design has a rich calendar of public programs throughout the yr, including educational activities, lectures, and performances past the artists in residence, including musicians (such equally Alsarah and the Nubatones), dancers (such as Amirah Sackett), comedians (Tanzila 'Taz' Ahmed and Zahra Noorkbakhsh of Adept Muslim Bad Muslim), and intellectuals (such as Dr. Lonnie Bunch).

Location [edit]

The Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture & Design is situated on a 4.9-acre (20,000 m2) oceanfront lot in the exclusive Black Bespeak residential neighborhood almost Diamond Head, Hawaii. All tours to Shangri La begin and stop at the Honolulu Museum of Art, which occupies 3.2 acres (13,000 m2) near downtown Honolulu.

As the museum operates under the terms of a provisional use permit from the Metropolis and County of Honolulu, visitor access is restricted. Visitors are not permitted to drive or park on-site at Shangri La or in the surrounding residential neighborhood.

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Near Us". Doris Knuckles Foundation for Islamic Art. Archived from the original on March 18, 2016. Retrieved March 22, 2016.
  2. ^ Margaret Bourke-White: Newly congenital estate, Shangri-la, belonging to American Tobacco Co. heiress Doris Duke and hubby James Cromwell (Honolulu, 1937)
  3. ^ To build the house more than two hundred men had labored a yr laying the foundation, excavating v acres of lava. [...] She named her fortress Wahi Pana, legendary identify. Kiana Davenport: Song of the Exile. New York 2000, ISBN 0-345-43494-3, pp. xi–12
  4. ^ "Shangri La Timeline". Shangri La Center for Islamic Arts and Cultures. Archived from the original on February 9, 2015. Retrieved Jan 28, 2015.
  5. ^ "Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture, & Design. | Search the Drove". www.shangrilahawaii.org . Retrieved 2019-06-04 .

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Interview: Museum Managing director Konrad Ng, Dec 2017

Coordinates: 21°15′24″N 157°47′41″Westward  /  21.25667°N 157.79472°W  / 21.25667; -157.79472

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shangri_La_(Doris_Duke)