Pavel Pavlovich Ivanov [Mak] (1891-1967)
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Pavel Pavlovich Ivanov [Mak] (1891-1967)

Schéhérazade with a peacock

Details
Pavel Pavlovich Ivanov [Mak] (1891-1967)
Schéhérazade with a peacock
signed, inscribed and dated 'MAK/1924/Teheran' (lower right)
black ink and watercolour on paper, circular
8½ in. (21.5 cm.) diameter
Provenance
Acquired by the present owner's grandfather in the late 1920s, Teheran. By descent in the family to the present owner.
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

Pavel Petrovich Ivanov, who worked under the pseudonym Paul Mak, studied at K. Iuon's studio in Moscow and illustrated for Moscow and St. Petersburg journals including Satirikon before enrolling at the Kiev Military Academy following the outbreak of World War I. He was wounded during action but by the end of the war had been promoted to the rank of Captain and served in the 89th Belomorskii Infantry Regiment. Imprisoned by the Bolsheviks in Butyrskii following the October revolution, Mak was swiftly rehabilitated and by 1920 was working as an artist for the Theatre of Revolutionary Satire in Moscow.
Mak's emigration in 1922 heralded the most exciting and creative period in his oeuvre. Crossing Turkestan and Afghanistan, Mak settled in Persia, modern-day Iran, initially working as a racehorse trainer before an introduction to the Reza Shah led to his appointment as official court artist. During this period, Mak was devoted to the study of the Persian miniature, renowned for its exquisite detail and intricacy. He sought inspiration from the exoticism of Eastern tales and history and lent his stylised line to figures such as Salome, Tamberlane and Chingis Khan. Perhaps the most fertile source for his miniatures was 'The Thousand and One Nights', a collection of tales that originated in India, Persia and Arabia. It has been suggested that lots 55 and 56 depict the beautiful Schéhérazade who saved her life by entertaining the murderous King Shahryar with tales of passion, genies and magical transformations.

We are grateful to Dr Dimitri Dourdine Mak for his help with cataloguing lots 54-56.

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