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Venetians and Turks: A mutual curiosity

International Herald Tribune, France
June 9 2006

Venetians and Turks: A mutual curiosity
By Souren Melikian International Herald Tribune

Published: June 9, 2006

LONDON Politicians in charge of international relations should ponder
the show “Bellini and the East” on view at the National Gallery until
June 25, and the book that defines its message. East and West did
meet in the past. In doing so their encounters oscillated between
devastating wars and hilarious mutual misperception.

The case considered here, the Venetian-Turkish love-hate
relationship, while over 500 years old, has a curiously topical ring.
The last two decades of the 15th century were not a time of
felicitous harmony.

Western Europe was smarting from the cataclysm of 1453.
Constantinople – the “City of Constantine,” the Greek emperor who had
declared in A.D. 313 the observance of Christian rites licit in the
Roman empire – had been overrun by a new power whose irresistible
thrust had not been anticipated in the West.

Few could have guessed that an obscure dynasty that we call Ottoman,
from the Turkish Osmanli, would grow into a giant. It had arisen in
Central Anatolia, soon incorporating a patchwork of ethnic and
cultural communities: Greek in much of Western Anatolia, Arab on the
south eastern shores of the Mediterranean, Armenian in the
north-eastern quarter, Kurdish (in other words, West Iranian) in the
southeastern quarter, and others.

Strongly assertive, the Ottomans did not really have a clear sense of
their own identity. The rulers, and armies, were Turkish, the
literate elite largely Persian speaking. The Ottomans were true
globalists before the word was invented – they wanted to dominate the
globe.

The 1453 conquest of Constantinople was a huge step in that
direction. Symbolic occurrences had a deeper resonance than the two
consecutive days of slaughter and looting about which Venice only
heard from the thousands of Greek refugees who flocked to Italy. The
Church of the Holy Apostles founded by Constantine, rebuilt by
Justinian in the 6th century, was razed and in its place a new
building arose, the “Fetih Mosque” (Conqueror’s Mosque).

The Venetians who were on the front line, if only because they
exercised a colonial domination over parts of Greece (the southern
Peloponnese, then called Morea; Lemnos and some islands) could not
forget the destruction, even if they wanted to. The vanished church
had served as the prototype for their most famous monument, the
11th-century church of San Marco.

The Turkish advance continued. Forced to conclude peace in 1479,
Venice gave up the Albanian city of Shköder (Scutari in Italian),
important tracts of Greek land, including Morea and Lemnos. To no
avail. The peace lasted as long as the conqueror, Mehmet II, was
alive, that is until 1481. Skirmishes broke out, and then war once
more. In 1499, the Ottomans occupied Lepanto. By 1500 they held two
ports that gave them strategic control of the Corinthian Gulf.

The Venetians developed a psychotic curiosity about the “other side.”
At first, knowledge was scanty. When information is lacking, as any
politician worth his salt will tell you, you make it up.

The figure of the conqueror excited imaginations. Around 1470, a
portrait of “The Grand Turk” circulated, engraved by an unknown
artist. It is hilarious. The features of the Turkish Sultan
represented in profile are based on those of the Byzantine emperor
John VIII Palaiologos in an interpretation that is not exactly
flattering. The high-beaked nose plunges precipitously and the
sultan’s angry expression is not unlike that of the hissing chimera
perched on his hat.

What fit of whimsy drove an unknown visitor to present the image to
the conqueror is not known. The two surviving impressions are both
preserved in the Topkapi Saray Museum in Istanbul. Apparently, Mehmet
II relished this testimony to Western ignorance of his appearance.

However, he may have thought that a joke should be allowed to go just
so far. One of the conditions of the peace signed with Venice in 1479
stipulated that “a good painter” be dispatched from Venice to paint
his likeness. The Doges did the decent thing. They sent their most
famous portraitist, Gentile Bellini. His likeness of Mehmet II
signed, dated 1480, shows a thin-lipped man staring with an
impenetrable expression. How the portrait found its way to the West
(it belongs to the National Gallery in London) is as mysterious as
the eastward peregrinations of his cartoonish likenesses engraved
some 10 years earlier.

As if the Venetians were hypnotized by the man who had beaten them,
the well-heeled elite craved images of the Sultan even after his
death. Bellini designed bronze medals representing Mehmet II in
profile, in Ancient Roman style.

Framing the portrait in low relief, an inscription in Roman capitals
spells out in Latin the words “of the Great Sultan, Emperor.” An
intriguing detail escaped the scrutiny of Susan Spinale in her superb
essay on the subject. These titles actually translate the official
protocol of the Sultan with its mix of Arabic and Persian words
“al-Sultan al-Moazzam, Shahinshah.” Bellini, it seems, had done
serious research work before embarking on his labor.

Other medal designers went further in their expressions of adulation.
“Great and Admired Sultan, Mehmet Bey,” proclaims the Latin
inscription on a medal possibly designed by a follower of Pisanello.
Around 1478, Costanzo di Moysis even celebrated the conquest that had
filled Europe with terror. On the reverse of a medal cast with one of
the finest portraits of the Sultan, a Latin sentence intones: “This
man, the thunderbolt of war, has laid low peoples and cities.
Constantius [Costanzo] made it.”

The East displayed symmetrical curiosity and admiration. Mehmet II
asked for a sculptor to be sent from Italy, a request, alas, that
left no identifiable traces.

The most intriguing result of Eastern curiosity is an enigmatic image
in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston. In the show, it is
considered to be the work of Bellini. An Oriental seen sideways,
seated crosslegged, writes on a tablet. The shading in the corner of
the eyes, the handling of the curling meshes coming down over the
ear, and above all the subtle psychological study of the expression
of mute concentration, lips pressed, eyes wide open, leave no doubt
about the Western training of the artist. Yet, the format and the
paper are those of Iranian book painting cultivated at the Ottoman
court. Apparently some gifted Westerner worked in the Iranian
technique. Bellini? Perhaps not.

More than 60 years later, possibly as a result of a royal present,
the painting reached Tabriz, then the Iranian capital, and was
mounted in an album put together for the younger brother of the Shah
under the direction of the great calligrapher Dust Mohammad. A band
of Persian calligraphy was supplied, stating that it is “the work of
Ibn Muazzin who is a famous European master.” Ibn Muazzin, or “The
son of the man who chants the call to prayer [muezzin]” is a curious
name for a European. It has to be the nickname by which the artist
came to be called by the Turks, who presumably passed it on to the
Iranians. Could this be Costanzo de Moysis, the bronze medal
designer, as the Italian historian Maria Andaloro plausibly suggested
long ago? No drawing by him is known, but the thought is tempting.

Even more intriguing is the painting that the portrait inspired the
most famous Iranian painter, Behzad, to create. The posture is the
same, but instead of writing, the artist represented draws a
portrait. Eastern stylization has eliminated the shading, the trompe
l’œil folds of the sleeves and the garment. The authors of the
book do not cite Behzad as the author. Yet, his signature is in his
own Arabic formulation, “Behzad gave it its form” (sawwarahu Behzad)
and, more conclusively, in his own hand, as I showed three years ago
in a collective book on Behzad.

Both portraits eventually went back to Constantinople with the album
of Bahram Mirza. In the 20th century, they somehow vanished from
Turkey to travel to the United States via France – Behzad’s portrait
is preserved in the Freer Gallery of Art in Washington, which is not
allowed to make loans.

Such are the missteps of East and West in the unpredictable minuet of
their loveless encounters.

Harutyunian Christine:
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