AN ABBASID POLYCHROME LUSTRE POTTERY BOWL
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AN ABBASID POLYCHROME LUSTRE POTTERY BOWL

PROBABLY MESOPOTAMIA, 9TH CENTURY

Details
AN ABBASID POLYCHROME LUSTRE POTTERY BOWL
PROBABLY MESOPOTAMIA, 9TH CENTURY
Of rounded form with everted rim on short foot, the pale tin glaze painted with brown and ochre lustre glaze with a rectangular band stretching across the centre composed of three seperate squares with different repeated patterns, with a series of floral roundels to either side against a ground of chevron-motifs, the exterior with two diagonal rows of deliberate splashes of brown lustre, repaired breaks, one area of restoration
7½in. (19.5cm.) diam.
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

This bowl has unusually well preserved three colours of lustre and glaze surface, giving a better idea than most that have survived of the immediate impact such pieces must have had when they were made. The design is however unusual for the polychrome lustre group, although all the individual elements are to be found in a number of examples, such as a bowl with segmented design in the Keir Collection (Ernst J. Grube, Islamic Pottery of the Eighth to the Fifteenth Century in the Keir Collection, London, 1976, no.16, p.51). As here, the decoration on the back is simple bold splashes. While the design is highly unusual in ninth century polychrome lustre, very similar compositions can however be found in pottery from Samarkand a century later (Grube, op. cit., no.51, p.95), and even two centuries later, in lustre from Kashan (Ernst J. Grube, Cobalt and Lustre, London, 1994, no.154, p.163).

A Thermoluminescence test, performed by Oxford Authentication on 5 August 2005, sample no.N105x40, is consistent with the suggested dating of this bowl.

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