A large part of Islam is based around the Hadith, which is (I think) "the traditions of the prophet" - so they aren't in the Quran itself; they are a collection of oral history that was set down some time after his death. Some Muslims reject the Hadith completely, some partly and some accept it as a crucial part of their religion. Predictably amd sadly, Sunnis and Shias have different versions of the Hadith, another area of strife between them.
Not sure but it's more than likely that it's the Hadith that forbids portraying not just Mohammed but any representative art (hence the preponderance of fancy tiling rather than pictures as decoration in much of the Muslim world).
Vin
Not sure but it's more than likely that it's the Hadith that forbids portraying not just Mohammed but any representative art (hence the preponderance of fancy tiling rather than pictures as decoration in much of the Muslim world).
Vin