LOVE IS MY LAW LOVE IS MY FAITH

2016

Love is my Law, Love is my Faith is inspired by the eight love poems by Ibn Arabi, a 12th century Sufi mystic, poet and philosopher.  Known as the taj al- rasa il wa-minhaj al-was il, these particular writings are considered some of the best love poems in Islamic history, outlining the nature of divine love and the perfect believer from a range of perspectives. He was inspired to write them while in Mecca, staring at the Ka’ba and was overcome by the presence of God. He felt the Ka’ba ask him to make the tawaf, the circumambulation around it, and the Zamzam ask for him to drink from it and he was afraid of this feeling of directly having the eyes of God upon him. But in this fear he felt love, an unusual kind of love. As he stood, staring at this being of stone, he thought of how it stood as an intermediary between the human and the divine. He went away and wrote these poems addressed to the Ka’ba and God, in order to express this knowledge of their divine realties. 

Awartani has responded to this literature by creating eight hanging embroidery panels. They are intricate and meticulously patterned, hand embroidered by textile craftsmen in India, steeped in the study of mathematics. The patterns themselves come from the traditions of sacred geometry and the artist uses them to create genealogies of meaning that act as a form of meditation, praying contemplation and search for the inner spirit rather than outer. When hanging they create a perfect cube but are truly activated by light cascading through the stepped layers, carving out a meditative inner expression. 

As you view her geometric embroidered panels you are on the inside of an aesthetic experience yourself, one that shares with us a form of love. This is a kind of depiction rooted in historical practice, and in the rendering of the infinite it reflects Qur’anic and divine perfection.

Installation shot of Love is my Law, Love is my Faith and the Kochi Muziris Biennale, 2016. Hand embroidery on fabric, 200 x 200 x 200 cm. © Dana Awartani