Ebru-Anatolia Art of Marbling
Marbling is the art of creating colorful patterns by sprinkling
and brushing color pigments on a pan of oily water and then transforming
this pattern to paper. The special tools of the trade are brushes
of horsehair bound to straight rose twigs, a deep tray made of unknotted
pinewood, natural earth pigments, cattle gall and tragacanth. It
is believed to be invented in the thirteenth century Turkistan.
This decorative art then spread to China, India and Persia and Anatolia.
Seljuk and Ottoman calligraphers and artists used marbling to decorate
books, imperial decrees, official correspondence and documents.
New forms and techniques were perfected in the process and Turkey
remained the center of marbling for many centuries. Up until the
1920 s, marblers had workshops in the Beyazit district of Istanbul,
creating for both the local and European market, where it is known
as Turkish marble paper.
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