Photographer's Note
Arab World Institute
Mashrabiya or Shanasheel is the Arabic term given to a type of projecting oriel window enclosed with carved wood latticework located on the second storey of a building or higher, often lined with stained glass. The mashrabiy (sometimes shanshool or rushan) is an element of traditional Arabic architecture used since the middle ages up to the mid-20th century. It is mostly used on the street side of the building; however, it may also be used internally on sahn side.
Mashrabiyas were mostly used in houses and palaces although sometimes in public buildings such as hospitals, inns, schools and government buildings.
They are found mostly in the mashriq i.e. east of the Arab world, but some types of similar windows are also found in the maghrib (west of the Arab world). They are very prevalent in Iraq, the Levant, Hejaz and Egypt. They are mostly found in urban settings and rarely in rural areas. Basra is often called 鍍he city of Shanasheel.
Wikipedia
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Critiques | Translate
worldcitizen
(16108) 2012-04-21 19:36
Hello Diane,
I like these Arabic patterns, and the clear reflections you captured. At first I wondered if this was a B/W photo, but I noticed some color through the circles on the screens. Maybe it would be stronger only in B/W, but it is just an idea. I like your presentation.
danyy
(0) 2012-04-23 6:34
Bonjour Diane,
une note tr鑚 int駻essante et primordiale pour la compr馼ension de cette photo vraiment particuli鑽e.
Contre jour bien g駻 qui donne des lumi鑽es parfaites et des reflets bien visibles.
Pas facile de trouver le meilleur angle de prise de vue.
Mes compliments.
Daniel.
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Diane Vaillancourt (divail)
(8334)
- Genre: 場所
- Medium: カラー
- Date Taken: 2011-08-04
- Categories: Architecture
- Camera: Sony DSC HX100v
- Exposure: f/2.8, 1/200 seconds
- Map: view
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2012-04-21 18:29