miércoles, 27 de enero de 2016

Stanford University Silk Road lecture

“The Enigmatic Rock Reliefs at Taq-I-Bustan:  A Late Sasanian Site on the “Silk Road”
By Matteo Compareti, Visiting Professor, U.C. Berkeley
Wednesday, February 3, at 7:30 p.m.
Knight Building Room 102, 521 Memorial Way, Stanford University

The unfinished monument at Taq-i Bustan include two artificially carved grottoes and a typical celebrative Sasanian rock relief. The Persian sovereign who built Taq-i Bustan cannot be identified for certain since the problematic crown that he wears in the reliefs of the larger grotto does not present any clear parallel in Sasanian coinage. Art historians have recently proposed some ideas about different phases in the construction of that monument with very convincing arguments that could even find some support in Islamic written sources. It is highly probable that a usurper who came from Central Asia and imported many external elements (namely Sogdian) in Persia initiated the larger grotto at Taq-i Bustan. This could be the reason of the occurrence of unique textile decorations just on the garments of the relevant people on those rock reliefs. Those decorative elements have been probably introduced from Central Asia into Sasanian Persia and not vice–versa.


Prof. Campareti received his Ph. D. from the University of Naples “L’Orientale” in 2005 and his degree in Oriental Languages and Literatures, from the  University of Venice “Ca’ Foscari” (cum laude) in 1999. His books and monographs include
1) I popoli iranici e la navigazione nell’Oceano Indiano, Venezia, 2005.
2) Literary Evidence for the Identification of Some Common Scenes in Han Funerary Art, (“Sino-Platonic Papers”, 160; Philadelphia: Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Pennsylvania, September 2005).
3) With Simone Cristoforetti, The Chinese Scene at Afrāsyāb and the Iranian Calendar, Venice, 2007.
4) Traces of Buddhist Art in Sogdiana, (“Sino-Platonic Papers”, 181; Philadelphia: Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Pennsylvania, August 2008).
5) Samarcanda Centro del Mondo. Proposte di lettura del ciclo pittorico di Afrāsyāb, Milano-Udine, 2009.
6) With Touraj Daryaee and Khodadad Rezakhani, Iranians on the Silk Road. Merchants, Kingdoms and Religions, Beverly Hills, 2010.

Sponsored by the Silkroad Foundation and the Center for East Asian Studies.

Coming up:
“Trans-Himalyan Transmissions:  Sino-Sogdian Textile Heritage in Tibetan Areas”
By Mariachiara Gasparini, lecturer, Santa Clara University
Wednesday, March 2, at 7:30 p.m.
Knight Building Room 102, 521 Memorial Way, Stanford University