The leading ornamental motif koshkar muyiz in Kazakh ornamentation: in search of the primordi

The ornamental motif of Koshkar Muyiz – the legacy of the Ancient times – remains key in the traditional art of felt craft. The horn-shaped figures of the Kazakhs had been a centerpiece of scholarly discourses of Kazakh, Russian and Soviet science over the entire 20th century. The first attempts to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sergali Suraganov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National University 2021-11-01
Series:Turkic Studies Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tsj.enu.kz/index.php/new/article/view/92
_version_ 1797342344910995456
author Sergali Suraganov
author_facet Sergali Suraganov
author_sort Sergali Suraganov
collection DOAJ
description The ornamental motif of Koshkar Muyiz – the legacy of the Ancient times – remains key in the traditional art of felt craft. The horn-shaped figures of the Kazakhs had been a centerpiece of scholarly discourses of Kazakh, Russian and Soviet science over the entire 20th century. The first attempts to find their meaning were made by the German ethnologist R. Karutz (1911), the Russian researchers S. Dudin (1928), B. Kuftin (1926), E. Schneider (1927), and others. The horn-shaped motif had been reviewed in the works of archaeologists, art historians and ethnographers since the second half of the 20th century. Scientists determined the time of its origin, its geography, and attempted to translate its semantic content. It was found that the curvilinear motif had not appeared earlier than the New Stone Age, but in the Bronze Age, it had developed in the form of various styled designs. This motif obviously played a key role in the ornamental complex of the Turkic-Mongol peoples. Based on the interdisciplinary approach, the author offers a number of reasons to explain its viability, including the internal form of the word - name of the ornamental motif, which is epic in nature since it can cause a special aesthetic reaction in viewers. The ornamental motif seems to play the role of a “figure of memories” and have the status of a “substantiative past”. It is preserved as a linguistic objectification (name) in an extra-linguistic format as well, in the form of an Iconic Model of a transcultural anagram that reproduces the ancient ideological content with symbolic and magical scope. Acting as a canon, the Koshkar Muyiz motif is a sort of a “Signature of the Era” with its artistic charm and is constructively based on the line called the “Line of Beauty” by William Hogarth.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T10:31:56Z
format Article
id doaj.art-e58cc4e53e2a41a2868715674ef0272a
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2664-5157
2708-7360
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T10:31:56Z
publishDate 2021-11-01
publisher L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National University
record_format Article
series Turkic Studies Journal
spelling doaj.art-e58cc4e53e2a41a2868715674ef0272a2024-01-26T19:52:17ZengL.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National UniversityTurkic Studies Journal2664-51572708-73602021-11-013210.32523/2664-5157-2021-2-99-110The leading ornamental motif koshkar muyiz in Kazakh ornamentation: in search of the primordi Sergali Suraganov0S. Seifullin Kazakh Agrotechnical University The ornamental motif of Koshkar Muyiz – the legacy of the Ancient times – remains key in the traditional art of felt craft. The horn-shaped figures of the Kazakhs had been a centerpiece of scholarly discourses of Kazakh, Russian and Soviet science over the entire 20th century. The first attempts to find their meaning were made by the German ethnologist R. Karutz (1911), the Russian researchers S. Dudin (1928), B. Kuftin (1926), E. Schneider (1927), and others. The horn-shaped motif had been reviewed in the works of archaeologists, art historians and ethnographers since the second half of the 20th century. Scientists determined the time of its origin, its geography, and attempted to translate its semantic content. It was found that the curvilinear motif had not appeared earlier than the New Stone Age, but in the Bronze Age, it had developed in the form of various styled designs. This motif obviously played a key role in the ornamental complex of the Turkic-Mongol peoples. Based on the interdisciplinary approach, the author offers a number of reasons to explain its viability, including the internal form of the word - name of the ornamental motif, which is epic in nature since it can cause a special aesthetic reaction in viewers. The ornamental motif seems to play the role of a “figure of memories” and have the status of a “substantiative past”. It is preserved as a linguistic objectification (name) in an extra-linguistic format as well, in the form of an Iconic Model of a transcultural anagram that reproduces the ancient ideological content with symbolic and magical scope. Acting as a canon, the Koshkar Muyiz motif is a sort of a “Signature of the Era” with its artistic charm and is constructively based on the line called the “Line of Beauty” by William Hogarth. https://tsj.enu.kz/index.php/new/article/view/92ornamental motif, pattern, Koshkar Muyiz, Kazakhs, Kazakhstan, artistic felt
spellingShingle Sergali Suraganov
The leading ornamental motif koshkar muyiz in Kazakh ornamentation: in search of the primordi
Turkic Studies Journal
ornamental motif, pattern, Koshkar Muyiz, Kazakhs, Kazakhstan, artistic felt
title The leading ornamental motif koshkar muyiz in Kazakh ornamentation: in search of the primordi
title_full The leading ornamental motif koshkar muyiz in Kazakh ornamentation: in search of the primordi
title_fullStr The leading ornamental motif koshkar muyiz in Kazakh ornamentation: in search of the primordi
title_full_unstemmed The leading ornamental motif koshkar muyiz in Kazakh ornamentation: in search of the primordi
title_short The leading ornamental motif koshkar muyiz in Kazakh ornamentation: in search of the primordi
title_sort leading ornamental motif koshkar muyiz in kazakh ornamentation in search of the primordi
topic ornamental motif, pattern, Koshkar Muyiz, Kazakhs, Kazakhstan, artistic felt
url https://tsj.enu.kz/index.php/new/article/view/92
work_keys_str_mv AT sergalisuraganov theleadingornamentalmotifkoshkarmuyizinkazakhornamentationinsearchoftheprimordi
AT sergalisuraganov leadingornamentalmotifkoshkarmuyizinkazakhornamentationinsearchoftheprimordi