Page 50 - ART OF THE ISLAMIC AND INDIAN WORLDS Carpets, Ceramics Objects, Christie's London Oct..27, 2022
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*37
                                                                     A KASHAN LUSTRE POTTERY DISH
                                                                     IRAN, EARLY 13TH CENTURY
                                                                     The central roundel with a pair of birds against a scrolling ground,
                                                                     the cavetto with a band of white naskh against a lustre ground with
                                                                     a series of cartouches containing arabesques or dots beyond, the
                                                                     rim with white naskh against a dark lustre ground
                                                                     12¡in. (31.3cm.) diam.
                                                                     £10,000-15,000                US$12,000-17,000
                                                                                                     €12,000-17,000

                                                                     PROVENANCE:
                                                                     Excavated Awdan Tepe, Gurgan, 1946-7
                                                                     INSCRIPTIONS:
                                                                     Around the inside of the rim part of a Persian benedictory quatrain:
                                                                     ‘May your wealth and glory always increase, May your prosperity
                                                                     surpass all limits, So whatever reaches your palate from this
                                                                     bowl …” [For the full poem, see Oya Pancaroğlu, Perpetual Glory:
                                                                     Medieval Islamic Ceramics from the Harvey B. Plotnick Collection,
                                                                     New Haven, 2007, p. 143.];
                                                                     Also are repeats of part of a Persian benedictory couplet: “Protect [O
                                                                     Creator of the World], the owner [of this bowl, wherever he may be]”
                                                                     Excerpts from the same verses are found around the interior of the
                                                                     base
                                                                     Two similar confronted birds on a ground of tight scrolls are
                                                                     also found on a bowl, dated to AH 614/1217 AD, formerly in the
                                                                     collection of Clement N. Ades and now in the Victoria & Albert
                                     37
                                                                     Museum (C160-1977; Dr. Mehdi Bahrami¸ Gurgan Faiences, Cairo,
                                                                     1949, pl.LI).


          *38
          A NISHAPUR CONICAL POTTERY BOWL
          IRAN, 10TH CENTURY
          Painted under the glaze in ochre, yellow and white against a brown
          ground, the interior with a rabbit at the centre surrounded by a
          band of zig-zag pattern enclosing triangles, the exterior painted
          with a red slip and clear glaze                                                                                        *39
          8in. (20.4cm.) diam.                                                                                                   A MONUMENTAL KASHAN LUSTRE POTTERY DISH
          £5,000-7,000                   US$5,800-8,000                                                                          ILKHANID IRAN, LATE 13TH/EARLY 14TH CENTURY
                                           €5,700-8,000                                                                          The central roundel with a figure riding a horse, encircled by a band of cobalt-  instance, bear resemblance to those that decorate a number of tiles in the
                                                                                                                                 blue pseudo-inscriptions, the cavetto with eight musicians against floral   Museum of the Shrine of Fatima in Qumm, one dated AH 661/1263 AD
                                                                                                                                 ground, the rim with a further band of pseudo-inscriptions, repaired breaks
                                                                                                                                                                                                                    th
          PROVENANCE:                                                                                                                                                                and another attributed to the latter part of the 13 century (Arthur Upham
                                                                                                                                 and areas of restoration
          Excavated Village Tepe, Nishapur, first half twentieth century                                                                                                              Pope, ‘New Findings in Persian Ceramics of the Islamic Period’, Bulletin of
                                                                                                                                 18in. (45.7cm.) diam.
                                                                                                                                                                                     the American Institute for Iranian Art and Archaeology, Vol.5, no.2, December
          One of the most enigmatic groups of Islamic pottery, 10th century                                                      £60,000-80,000                      US$69,000-91,000  1937, figs.5 and 6, p.155 and 157). Our mounted horseman also finds stylistic
          Nishapur ware is easily identified by the use of vivid, often                                                                                                 €69,000-91,000  resemblance to images from the Diez Album, originally from an early
          figural, designs and the use of a lead stannate pigment which                                                                                                               fourteenth century copy of Rashid al-Din’s Jami’ al-Tawarikh. The depiction of
          appears as a bright mustard yellow. Their iconography has been                                                         PROVENANCE:                                         the horse, the horseman’s turban and the wide rounded faces of our figures
          variously interpreted as astrological symbols, royal Sassanian                                                         Excavated Ray, 1928                                 all bear resemblance to those of a folio depicting a Mongol Travelling (Diez A
          imagery, or depictions of the annual celebration of Nowruz. While                                                                                                          fol.71,S.53; published The Legacy of Genghis Khan, exhibition catalogue, New
          Nishapur ware more often depicts rams and ibexes, the rabbit                                                           This is a spectacular example of a large-scale Ilkhanid lustre dish. Although   York, 2002, p.43, fig.39, cat.no.22). The heavy lotus-like palmettes, also find
          is not uncommon across the broader corpus of medieval Islamic                                                          there has been some restoration, the drawing on the original elements is   comparison on later 13 century tiles, including those on the star tile which
                                                                                                                                                                                                   th
          pottery and was frequently depicted in contemporaneous Khalila                                                         extremely elegant and precise - the face of the central rider and his horse,   is lot 31 in this sale. Although there are numerous tiles that survive from this
          wa Dimna manuscripts. Red-slip bowls with a similar silhouette                                                         their elaborate spotted coats, and the moon-faced musicians that decorate   later period of lustre production, there are fewer vessels and even less on this
          but with non-figural decoration can be found in the collection of                                                       the rim, for instance, are all drawn with a beautiful finesse. Ilkhanid figural   grand scale, which allows for a real strength of design. Another very large
          the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and in the Al-Sabah                                                          lustre, particularly on this scale, is rare. The lustre here is beautifully dark   Ilkhanid lustre dish, very different in design but with a similar overall feeling,
          Collection, Kuwait (Oliver Watson, Ceramics from the Islamic                                                           and intense, and the drawing finds close comparison with that on a number   was previously in the Kevorkian collection, and offered for sale at Sotheby’s,
                                                                                                                                                                th
                                                                                                                                                         th
          Lands, London, 2004, p. 229).                                                                                          of tiles that are typically dated late 13 or early 14 century. The figures, for   London, October 2011, lot 216.
                                                                                  38
          48     In addition to the hammer price, a Buyer’s Premium (plus VAT) is payable. Other taxes and/or an Artist Resale Royalty                                                                                              49
                 fee are also payable if the lot has a tax or λ symbol. Check Section D of the Conditions of Sale at the back of this catalogue.
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