Arts & calligraphy

art and literature — the visual and poetic heritage of the Muslim world

Islamic calligraphy is the art form that gave written language a soul. Across 1,400 years, Muslim artists developed scripts so refined that a single word — rendered in ink, carved in stucco, or set in tile — could simultaneously convey meaning, beauty, and devotion. This is the tradition that produced the Topkapi Quran, the Alhambra’s inscribed walls, and the Islamic manuscripts that preserved Greek philosophy for a world that had forgotten it.

Islamic calligraphy
Islamic art history
This hub covers the full breadth of Islamic art history: the development of Arabic calligraphy art across six major scripts, the Islamic art and geometry of sacred architecture, and the rich tradition of Islamic poetry and literature from Rumi to Al-Mutanabbi. It is a space for art and design history enthusiasts, collectors, students, and anyone who has looked at a piece of Islamic art and felt — without quite knowing why — that it was doing something other art forms do not.