Page 62 - ART OF THE ISLAMIC AND INDIAN WORLDS Carpets, Ceramics Objects, Christie's London Oct..27, 2022
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                                                                               A SAFAVID SILK TOMB COVER                         QURAN JUZ' XI
                                                                               FRAGMENT                                          SAFAVID IRAN, 17TH CENTURY
                                                                               IRAN, CIRCA 1700                                  Comprising the eleventh juz', Arabic manuscript
                                                                               With a central register of blue ground decorated   on buff paper, 25ff. plus two flyleaves, each folio
                                                                               with ivory cartouches containing thuluth          with 7ll. of black naskh within gold and polychrome
                                                                               inscriptions, stylised half carnations around,    rules, with gold rosette verse markers, gold and
                                                                               framed by vertical yellow ground calligraphic     blue marginal medallions, sura headings in gold
                                                                               cartouches separated by split palmettes, an area   thuluth inside illuminated cartouches, opening
                                                                               of plain red ground to one side, couched to a fabric   folio with gold and polychrome illuminated
                                                                               mount and glazed                                  headpiece, purple dyed paper flyleaves, in original
                                                                               Fragment 20q x 20ºin. (52 x 51.5cm.);             Safavid binding with flap with large panel of
                                                                               mount 23æ x 23æin. (60.5 x 60.5cm.)               stamped and tooled gilded decoration worked
                                                                                                                                 with calligraphic borders, doublures with gilded
                                                                               £7,000-10,000        US$8,100-11,000              decoupé arabesque medallion and spandrels over
                                                                                                      €8,100-11,000              polychrome panels.
                                                                                                                                 Text panel 4¡ x 5q in. (10.9 x 14.1 cm.);
                                                                               PROVENANCE:                                       folio 6w x 9¬ in. (17.3 x 24.2 cm.)
                                                                               Antike Textilien und Sammlerteppiche, Rudolf
                                                                               Mangisch, Galerie und Auktionshaus, Zurich,       £7,000-10,000        US$8,100-11,000
                                                                               16 November 1991, nr. 80                                                €8,000-11,000
                                                                                                                                 Another juz' from the same Qur’an was sold in
                                                                               INSCRIPTIONS:
                                                                               In the small, yellow cartouches: ya husayn-i      these Rooms, 7 April 2011, lot 134.
                                                                               mazlum, 'O Husayn, the oppressed!'
                                                                               In the large cartouche an undeciphered inscription
                                                                               containing the names of Husayn and 'Ali.
                                                                               Textiles of this kind were made as tomb covers or
                                                                               hangings as tributes for the shrines of honoured
                                                                               or holy men. A similar textile is in the Philadelphia   49
                                                                               Museum of Art (inv.no.1922-22-90; published
                                                                               in Sheila R. Canby, Shah ‘Abbas. The Remaking     A YOUTH HOLDING A BOTTLE
                                                                                                                                 SAFAVID IRAN, CIRCA 1640
                                                                               of Iran, exhibition catalogue, London, 2009,
                                                                               pp.238-39, no.116). It shares with ours identical   Opaque pigments and ink heightened with gold
                                                                                                                                 on paper, set between gold and polychrome rules,
                                                                               format and decoration but with an inverted colour
         47                                                                    scheme. The calligraphy there was also bordered   with a gold sprinkled border and stencilled blue
                                                                                                                                 margins decorated with arabesques, pasted onto
                                                                               by elegant split-palmette leaves and rows of      card, the reverse with '181' in pencil
                                                                               quatrefoils surrounded by single leaves. Jon      Painting 4q x 1win. (11.5 x 4.8cm.);
                                                                               Thompson suggested that the stylised carnations   folio 10 x 6¿in. (25.3 x 15.5cm.)
                                                                               that appear in white on the blue ground of our
                                                                                                                                 £8,000-12,000       US$9,200-14,000
                                                                               textile are a typical Ottoman motif. However
                                                                                                                                                       €9,200-14,000
                                                                               they appear in an album of floral drawings with
                                                                               illustrations by Safavid artists which are thought   This elegant drawing is in the style of Muhammad
                                                                               have been the designs for textiles as well as in   Yusuf al-Husayni (d.1666) who was one of the
                                                                               other Safavid textiles themselves (Canby, op.cit.,   foremost artists of seventeenth-century Persia.
                                                                               p.234, no.113). Thompson proposed that a silk     The early part of his career was spent in Herat
                                                                               textile in Doha that also bore inscriptions and   under the patronage of Hassan Shamlu, but
                                                                               carnations was made for export to the Ottoman     after his death he moved to Isfahan. Following
                                                                               world. The overtly Shi’ite invocations here       in the style of Reza-i Abbasi (d.1635), alongside
                                                                               however, and on the Philadelphia textile indicate   contemporaries such as Muhammad Qasim,
                                                                               that it was more likely made for a Shi’ite tomb or   Muhammad Yusuf developed his own unique
                                                                               shrine.                                           style and produced drawings and paintings of
                                                                                                                                 outstanding draughtsmanship. Typical of his
                                                                                                                                 style is the depiction of graceful, tall figures with
                                                                                                                                 well-proportioned faces, and the use of lapiz
                                                                                                                                 lazuli to highlight certain folds on fabrics, as seen
                                                                                                                                 here. Although our painting is not signed, it is
                                                                                                                                 possible to assume it is either by Muhammad
                                                                                                                                 Yusuf or a contemporaneous artist who followed
                                                                                                                                 in his style. A drawing of a dervish signed and
                                                                                                                                 dated by Muhammad Yusuf which shares similar
                                                                                                                                 features to our painting is in the Museum of Fine
                                                                                                                                 Arts Boston, (inv. no.14.642). A portrait of a lady
                                                                                                                                 holding a wine bottle also signed and dated by
          48
                                                                                                                                 Muhammad Yusuf was sold at Sotheby’s London,
                                                                                                                                 25 April 2012, lot 478.
                                                                                                                                                                        49
          60     In addition to the hammer price, a Buyer’s Premium (plus VAT) is payable. Other taxes and/or an Artist Resale Royalty
                 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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