TURKISH Mosaic
Many of the churches and mosques in Turkey are decorated with elaborate mosaics. Haghia Sophia,
“The Church of Holy Wisdom” in Istanbul, one of the world’s greatest architectural achievements, the
Church of St. Saviour in Chora, and The Church of Haghia Sophia in Trabzon, situated on the Black
Sea, a restored 13th-century Byzantine church that reverted to a mosque in 1577, are just three of the many places
throughout Turkey which represent beautiful and intricate mosaics. Many of the mosaics depict Christ, Turkish
Emperors and/or scenes from the Old Testament of the Bible.
These mosaics were made using thousands of
small, individually colored titles, arranged sideby-
side on the walls and ceilings to create
intricate designs and pictures. Up close, they
look like an arbitrary arrangement of small
colored squares, but as you move away, the
tiles of these huge displays blend together to
create beautiful and very detailed multi-colored
pictures. In some mosques, these mosiacs
cover entire walls, or, such as in the case of the
Church of St. Savior in Chora, cover entire
domes and ceilings.
Activity:
Materials needed include different colors of
construction paper, scissors, white glue.
Obviously, the artists who created the mosiacs
throughout Turkey first began with a sketch or
design of the picture they wanted to create.
These pictures may have been first sketched
on the walls with charcoal, before the hundreds
of individual colored tiles were cemented in place to add the
color to the design and final picture.
Give each student an 8.5” x 11” piece of white cardboard or
construction paper. Using a pencil, have them draw a picture
of their choosing… a house, an animal, a favorite person. Or,
depending on the grade and their artistic ability, you may want
to distribute pre-drawn black & white line art pictures. Cut different colors of construction paper into small squares
(about 1/2” square each). Put each color of paper squares in a different bowl (bowl of red paper squares, bowl of
green paper squares, etc.). Let students apply glue to their picture and then arrange the small paper squares of
different colors to fill in different parts of their picture with color.
Ready to take on a larger project, one more comparable to the great artists of Turkey? Cover a bulletin board (or
an entire wall of your classroom) with white butcher paper. Have your class work together and use pencils or black
crayons to draw a huge scene covering the entire paper. The scene could include houses, sunshine, animals,
people, buildings, etc. It could be a scene of your schoolyard, a scene of different places throughout Memphis, or
a scene of associated with the Republic of Turkey. Each day, allow students to use the white glue and paper
squares to cover a section of your wall mosaic. Once the entire paper is covered, your room is decorated just like
Haghia Sophia (you may even want to enter it into Memphis in May’s “Best Classroom” contest!).