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Hima in the House: Avian Architecture Across the Islamic World

Two, large conical towers stand side by side. The towers have holes and perches for birds. A woman in a white shirt and long, black skirt stands in the foreground.

Through its recent ecological turn, the scholarly study of “Islamic” architecture has expanded to take into greater account both the animal and vegetal worlds. As nature’s most accomplished architects, birds have long contributed to the biomorphic landscape and built environment of the greater Middle East. Stretching from Morocco to India, houses made for birds, and made by birds, attest to the thriving of avian architecture across the centuries. Bird houses, whether impromptu or purpose-built, provide a type of sanctuary and refuge—or hima as conceptualized in Islamic philosophical and ecological traditions—dedicated to protecting avifauna and their related regions, the latter used as agricultural lands for human sustenance and/or as biodiversity reserves for non-human survival. Fluttering from nest and nook to tower and palace, this talk examines various types of bird houses, their architectonic language and creative forms, their intersections with vulnerable places and peoples, and their bio-material contributions to an integrated creaturely world.

Christiane Gruber is Professor of Islamic Art and Former Chair in the History of Art Department at the University of Michigan as well as Founding Director of Khamseen: Islamic Art History Online. Her scholarly work (available here) explores medieval to contemporary Islamic art, especially figural representation, depictions of the Prophet Muhammad, manuscripts and book arts, architecture, modern visual and material cultures, and ecological arts. She is currently writing her next book entitled Elements of the Middle East: Art, Faith, and Ecology.

Registration in advance for this webinar is required: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_uIAs--29Sv6OZYZaxOQSrA

Audubon Chapter of Minneapolis is a volunteer-based, nonprofit 501(c)3 organization. Your donation supports our efforts to provide free educational programming promoting birding and bird conservation.

Image: Christiane Gruber

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The Most Overlooked Birds in North America: Females