A CALLIGRAPHIC PANEL
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A CALLIGRAPHIC PANEL

SIGNED ISMA'IL JALAYIR, QAJAR IRAN, CIRCA 1860

Details
A CALLIGRAPHIC PANEL
SIGNED ISMA'IL JALAYIR, QAJAR IRAN, CIRCA 1860
Gouache on buff card, comprising a Persian couplet of Sa'di interspersed with others similar, the main couplet written in large nasta'liq painted in black, the interiors of the letters filled with closely drawn flowers, the other couplets in smaller white nasta'liq, the remaining space decorated with the finely painted workings of a dense design of flowers and birds in black, white, red, green and touches of blue, lower left hand corner signed Isma'il Jalayir, slightly trimmed
20¼ x 42¾in. (51.5 x 108.6cm.)
Provenance
Anon sale in these Rooms, 26 April 1994, lot 89, to the present owner
Special notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 20% on the buyer's premium.

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Andrew Butler-Wheelhouse

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Lot Essay

Isma'il Jalayir (d. ca. 1868-73) was the son Hajj Muhammad Zaman Khan Jalayir of Khorassan, who was a follower of a Sufi Sheikh of the Dhahabiya order called Muhammad Isma'il Dhabihullah, after whom Jalayir was named. After he graduated from the Dar al-Funun, of which he has been dubbed 'the most gifted alumnus' (R.W. Ferrier (ed.), The Arts of Persia, London, 1989, p. 231), he became an instructor there and his highly individualistic style found favour with Nasir al-Din Shah. At least two portraits of the Shah by Jalayir are known (one of which sold in these Rooms, 29 April 2003, lot 185). Many features of Jalayir's life remain unsubstantiated but it has been suggested both that he was a user of opium and that he ultimately went mad.

A dream-like, otherworldly quality which characterizes Jalayir's work is bought out here in the surreal contrast both in scale and nature between the bold calligraphy and the small-scale world of the background which is full of avian and floral motifs. Tight background details appear in several of Jalayir's works and are amongst the most distinctive aspect of his idiosyncratic style.

Though slightly more compact than some of works, the style, content and decoration of this calligraphic panel are typical of the Jalayir's gulzar style. It is particularly interesting to be able to see his initial workings where his fluid drawing, sureness of line and balanced design are, if anything, more apparent than in a finished work. For similar examples of calligraphic works by Jalayir, see Toby Falk (ed.), Treasures of Islam, exhibition catalogue, Geneva, 1985, pp.190-191. Another example sold in these Rooms, 23 April 1996, lot 102. More recently two examples have sold at Sotheby's, 12 October 2004, lot 30 and 31. A full scale oil portrait of a nobleman sold in these Rooms, 13 April 2010, lot 150.

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