A KASHAN COCKEREL HEAD POTTERY EWER
A KASHAN COCKEREL HEAD POTTERY EWER
A KASHAN COCKEREL HEAD POTTERY EWER
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A KASHAN COCKEREL HEAD POTTERY EWER
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE AMERICAN COLLECTIONLots 27-43 come from a Private American collection. They were all excavated with legal licenses in Iran in the 1930s and 40s and were brought to America at a time when Europe was becoming more troubled, and America was considered the marketplace with the greatest potential. The supply of serious works of art, coupled with active promotion by scholars such as Arthur Upham Pope, meant that interest in collecting Persian art rapidly grew, with museums building up representative collections as well as private individuals forming collections of the highest quality.
A KASHAN COCKEREL HEAD POTTERY EWER

IRAN, 13TH CENTURY

Details
A KASHAN COCKEREL HEAD POTTERY EWER
IRAN, 13TH CENTURY
Of bulbous form, the white ground decorated with cobalt-blue and black scrolls, a band of black calligraphy around the middle, the tapering neck terminating with a sculpted cockerel head and a slightly flared mouth, straight handle, surface iridescence, intact
10in. (25.7cm) high
Provenance
American collection, by 1971
Further details
Some countries prohibit or restrict the purchase and/or import of Iranian-origin property. Bidders must familiarise themselves with any laws or shipping restrictions that apply to them before bidding on these lots. For example, the USA prohibits dealings in and import of Iranian-origin “works of conventional craftsmanship” (such as carpets, textiles, decorative objects, and scientific instruments) without an appropriate licence. Christie’s has a general OFAC licence which, subject to compliance with certain conditions, would enable a buyer to import this type of lot into the USA. If you intend to use Christie’s licence, please contact us for further information before you bid.

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Sara Plumbly Director, Head of Department

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Lot Essay


Underglaze-painted vessels such as the present lot were contemporary with Kashan lustre ware. Often the decoration was done with cobalt-blue and black pigments - the former was quite volatile with a tendency to run, while the latter was thick and viscous enough that it could be incised. There are three examples of bowls decorated with this technique in the Khalili collection, of which one (cat.no. 214) is dated AH 611/1214 AD (Ernst J. Grube, “Iranian stone-paste pottery of the Saljuq period”, in Cobalt and Lustre: the First Centuries of Islamic Pottery, London, 1994, pp.197-99, cat.nos.213-15).

The distinctive form of this ewer, with its moulded cockerel’s head, is not uncommon in medieval Iranian pottery. Though they have a variety of different handle designs and body shapes, the heads are broadly homogenous across the group. The model may have been Sassanian metalwork or Tang Dynasty phoenix-head ewers, though an indigenous tradition can also not be ruled out (Oliver Watson, Ceramics of Iran, London, 2020, p.178, cat.no. 91). Other examples of this form with underglaze painting include two examples decorated only with horizontal stripes in the Sarikhani collection (Oliver Watson, op.cit., p.297, cat.no.151) and in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York (acc.no. 19.68.2). A further example was sold by Bonhams London, 24 April 2018, lot 172.

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