Geleneksel El Sanatları Bağlamında Kültür Ürünleri Olarak Türk Cam Sanatı: Surname-i Hümayun Analizi

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Number of pages:
13-26
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Year-Number:
2015-Volume 10 Issue 5

Cam, İnsanlığın ilk dönemlerinden günümüze dek geçen sürede teknik ihtiyaçtan, gündelik kullanıma; lüks tüketim maddesinden, endüstriyel ürün olarak kullanımına kadar yaşamın hemen her alanında kullanılagelmiştir. Kırılganlığı ve korunmaya muhtaç özelliği gereği günümüze kadar çok azı ulaşmış olan ve gelişim süreci ile ilgili kesin kayıt ve belgeleri bulunmayan Türk Cam Sanatının ilk örneklerine kısıtlı olarak Selçuklu ve Osmanlı dönemlerinde rastlarız. Mimari ve malzeme zenginliği açısından kendine özgü üslubu olan Anadolu Selçukluları, el sanatlarında da zengin bir üretime sahiptir. Nerede üretildiklerine dair farklı bilgilerin olduğu, Selçuklu dönemi cam sanatı örnekleriyle ilgili önemli bulgulara, Beyşehir Gölü kenarında, Anamas Dağı eteklerinde bulunan, Sultan Alaeddin Keykubad’ın yazlık olarak kullandığı Kubad Abad Sarayı kazılarında rastlanılmıştır. Osmanlı cam işleme sanatı, temelini Selçuklu camcılığından almış; ancak kendine özgü tarzını yaratarak özellikle 19. Yüzyılda en parlak dönemini yaşamıştır. Süleymaniye cami ve imareti (1550-1557) yapımında Osmanlı Dönemi camcılığı ile ilgili belgeler bulunmasına rağmen, dönemin camcılarının üretim ve biçimlendirmeleri ile ilgili hiçbir belge bulunmamaktadır. Bu konuda en açıklayıcı belge olarak, III. Murad döneminde oğlu Şehzade Mehmed’ in sünnet törenini (1582) anlatan “Surname-i Hümayun” da Nakkaş Osman ve ekibi tarafından yapıldığı bilinen minyatürün olduğu söylenebilir. Bu araştırmada geleneksel el sanatları bağlamında kültür ürünleri olarak Türk Cam sanatıyla ilgili bilgi ve belgelere ulaşabilmek amacıyla betimsel tarama modeli kullanılmış, veriler doküman incelemesi ve alanyazın yoluyla elde edilmiştir. Belge olarak Surname-i Hümayun konu bütünlüğü içerisinde analiz edilmiştir.

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Glass, which is thought to have been discovered in the Bronze Age at the age of 3 B. C. and the first examples of which can be seen in a great number places from Mesopotamia to Egypt, Mediterranean to Anatolia, has had an important place in almost every part of our lives from technical needs to daily use, from luxurious consumer goods to industrial products. Glass is an artifact and it can be found in nature as obsidian and rock crystal/natural quartz (pebble). Rock crystal, also known as natural quartz, is almost colorless and semi transparent. Examples such as the lion’s head from the fourth quarter of 3000 B.C. found in Troy and the Hittite statue made in 13th and 14th centuries B.C. show that rock crystal has been used in Anatolia from very old times (Canav, 1985: 19). In line with the resources and the data obtained, leaving the primitive methods in processing glass with the discovery of glass blowing pipe in Syria in 50 B.C. is considered as the radical change used in glass processing. Antique glass products: Roman glass (100 B.C. –400 A.D.) other residential areas within Italy, England, France, Spain, Belgium, Balkans, Anatolia, North Africa, Cyprus, Syria, Alexandria and Roman Empire; Byzantine glass (5 – 15 A.D.), Eastern Mediterranean coastal areas that produced most advanced containers and ornaments as well as mosaic and plain glass with free blowing technique, Ottoman glass making which occured at the same time with the bright periods of Bohemian glass making in the 19th century, Beykoz style glasses with their unique technique and ornaments are all named according to their methods of processing and modeling with their periods. Ottoman art of glass brought out works which were called “Turkish style” in Europe. The first examples of Turkish Glass art can be seen in Seljukian and Ottoman periods. Anatolian Seljukians who had a unique style in terms of architecture and richness of material also had a rich productivity in terms of handicraft. There is different information on where Seljukian period glass art examples are produced; important examples of this period were seen in excavations of Kubad-Abad Palace, on the foot of Anamas Mountain, which was used as the summer palace of Sultan Alaeddin Keykubad. Ottoman art of glass had its foundations in Seljukian glass making; however, it created its unique style based on the examples today and experienced its brightest period especially in 19th century. Glass industry developed especially after the conquest of İstanbul in the Ottoman period. In Ottoman period, guilds had very firm rules for everything from getting the raw materials necessary for the art or occupation, to processing, forming and selling these raw materials. This situation brought an order to the relations both among producers and between the producer and the user. In documents that belong to the period of Suleyman the Magnificent, there are names of glass makers. Camger Hasan and Yusuf are well-known names. According to a census in İstanbul during the period of Sultan Murat IV, Evliya Çelebi mentions the number of glass workshops working for the government, the shops and the workers in these shops and workshops. Although there are documents about Ottoman glass making in the construction of Suleymaniye mosque and imaret (1550-1557), there are few documents about the production and modeling of the glass makers of the period. Thus, Ottoman period miniatures are accepted as the strongest written and visual documents of their times. One of the most important documents is the miniature by muralist Levni which depicts the circumcision feast of Sultan Ahmet III’s four sons and the show of “şişebaz”s in poet Hüseyin Vehbi’s “Surname-i Vehbi”. This miniature is in Topkapı Palace Museum. Another important document is the miniatures by muralist Osman in Surname-i Hümayun which depict the circumcision feast of Sultan Murad III’s son Mehmed in 1582 which lasted for 52 days and 52 nights and also the para

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