A TIMURID CUERDA SECA POTTERY STAR TILE
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… 顯示更多
A TIMURID CUERDA SECA POTTERY STAR TILE

PROBABLY KHARGIRD, NORTH-EAST IRAN, 1442-3 AD

細節
A TIMURID CUERDA SECA POTTERY STAR TILE
PROBABLY KHARGIRD, NORTH-EAST IRAN, 1442-3 AD
The twelve-pointed star with cobalt-blue ground decorated with a radiating white designs of arabesques interlaceed with a similar design of turquoise tendrils linking red and gold flowerheads, turquoise stripe border, one point restored, a couple of others with slight restoration, a couple of retouched glaze chips, mounted on board
13 5/8in. (35cm.) across
注意事項
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis

拍品專文

Tiles such as this are known to have been placed in combination with others on the west iwan in the Ghiyathiyya Madrasa, Khargird (Lentz, Thomas W., and Glenn D. Lowry: Timur and the Princely Vision Persian Art and Culture in the Fifteenth Century, Los Angeles, 1989, p.90 and p.333). One half tile still remains in situ in the entrance hall (Golombek, L and Wilber, D: The Timurid Architecture of Iran and Turan, Princeton, 1988, II, pl.233). This building was finished in 846/1442-43 for Ghiyath al-Din Pir Ahmad Khvafi, one of the viziers of the Timurid Shah Rukh. The building was begun by the architect Qavam al-Din Shirazi who died in 1438, and was then completed by Ghiyath al-Din Shirazi.

Identical tiles can be found in the David Collection (Folsach, Kjeld von.: Art from the World of Islam in the David Collection, Copenhagen, 2001, pl.226, p.174), in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, (Carboni, Stefano and Masuya, Tomoko: Persian Tiles, New York, 1993, no.34, p.39, the note to which discusses further details and examples), and the British Museum (Porter, Venetia: Islamic Tiles, London, 1995, pl.63, p.69), amongst a number of others in public and private collections.