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A CALLIGRAPHIC PANEL

SIGNED 'IMAD AL-HASSANI, QAZVIN, IRAN, DATED AH 1010/1601-02 AD

Details
A CALLIGRAPHIC PANEL
SIGNED 'IMAD AL-HASSANI, QAZVIN, IRAN, DATED AH 1010/1601-02 AD
Persian manuscript on paper, with 6ll. of black nasta'liq, further lines written vertically along the long borders, signed and dated below, a line indicating that it was made in Qazwin written diagonally across the bottom corner, the text within cloud bands on gold ground, laid down on card between marbled painted cloth margins
Panel 8¾ x 4¼in. (22 x 11cm.)
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.

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Lot Essay

Mir 'Imad al-Hassani al-Husayni is amongst the most famous of the nasta'liq calligraphers of the Safavid period. He was born around the year AH 961/1553-54 AD in Qazwin, the capital of Safavid Iran. He moved to Tabriz where he was apprenticed to the master Muhammad Husayn Tabrizi, moving back to the capital on completion of his studies in AH 981/1573-74 AD. He became an itinerant craftsman, as was the custom among his profession, accepting commissions as he moved from one town to the next. Later in life he set out for the hajj and remained in the region for several years, working in Aleppo before returning to Iran in AH 1005/1596-97 AD. His great rival as court calligrapher, 'Ali Reza-i Abbassi, gradually replaced him in the Shah's favour and, in the increasingly extreme Shi'ite environment of the court of Shah 'Abbas, he was accused of Sufism and Sunnism. He was murdered in AH 1024/1615 AD by an agent of the Shah.

His recorded works are dated between AH 972/1564-65 AD and AH 1024/1615-16 AD (Mehdi Bayani, Ahval wa Asar-e Khosh-Nevisan, Vol. II, Tehran, 1346 sh., pp. 518-38).

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