Jali

Categorized as Terms

Jali

Leslee Michelsen

Related Terms:

  • Chahar bagh (quadrilateral garden layout)
  • Mashrabiyya (assembled wooden lattice work) 
  • Maqsura (enclosure around qibla wall in a mosque) 
  • Parchin-kari (marble inlay work) 
  • Qasr (palace)
  • Qibla (direction of the Kaʿba in Mecca) 

Related Khamseen Videos:

Yael Rice, “Jahangir’s Dream,” Khamseen: Islamic Art History Online, published 16 October 2020.

Denise-Marie Teece, “Monsoon Winds and Ming Porcelains: Collecting and Displaying Chinese Ceramics at the Mughal Court,” Khamseen: Islamic Art History Online, published 10 March 2022.

References:

Asher, Catherine B. Architecture of Mughal India. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992, p. 133.

Koch, Ebba. Mughal Architecture: An Outline of its History and Developments. Munich: Prestel-Verlag, 1991, p. 72.

Haidar, Navina Najat, ed. Jali: Lattice of Divine Light in Mughal Architecture. Ahmedabad: Mapin Publishing, 2023.

Merklinger, Elizabeth Schotten. Sultanate Architecture of Pre-Mughal India. New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal, 2005, pp. 83–84.

Michelsen, Leslee Katrina. “Jālī,” Encyclopaedia of Islam Three, edited by Kate Fleet, Gudrun Krämer, Denis Matringe, John Nawas, and Everett Rowson. Brill: first published online 2021.

Tartakov, Gary Michael. “The Beginning of Dravidian Temple Architecture in Stone”, Artibus Asiae 42/1 (1980), pp. 39–99.

Zajadacz-Hastenrath, Salome. “A Note on Babur’s Lost Funerary Enclosure at Kabul”, Muqarnas 14 (1997), pp. 135–142.

Worksheet:

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Citation:

Leslee Michelsen, “Jali,” Khamseen: Islamic Art History Online, published 7 November 2023.

Leslee Katrina Michelsen (Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania) is a Board Member and Programs Committee Co-Chair at ICOM-US. From 2017-2023 she was the Senior Curator of Collections and Exhibitions at the Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture & Design in Honolulu, where she led the team responsible for the exhibition, interpretation, research, and conservation of the museum’s collection of historic and contemporary arts of the Islamic world. She was also the Head of the Curatorial and Research Section at the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, Qatar from 2011-2016, and has worked on numerous cultural heritage and archaeology projects throughout Central Asia, South Asia, and East Africa. She is a specialist of materiality and making from the historic to the contemporary periods in Central and South Asia, and of myriad mediums ranging from architecture to ceramics to textiles. She also explores contemporary museology of the arts of the Islamic world, and serves on the Steering Committee of Steppe Sisters as well as the museum grantmaking initiatives of the National Endowment for the Arts.