A CALLIGRAPHIC POTTERY BOWL
A CALLIGRAPHIC POTTERY BOWL

POSSIBLY FATIMID EGYPT OR IRAN, 12TH CENTURY

Details
A CALLIGRAPHIC POTTERY BOWL
POSSIBLY FATIMID EGYPT OR IRAN, 12TH CENTURY
Of conical form on short flared foot, with tapering lip, the carved decoration with an inscription in foliated kufic script with exagerated upstrokes reading al-'izz (glory) reserved against the ground, under transparent cobalt-blue glaze, repaired breaks, minor restoration
6 3/8in. (16.2cm.) diam.

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Lot Essay

The present bowl shows strong similarities with a large incised green-glazed jar in the Al-Sabah Collection decorated with fleshy palmette scrollwork over carved ground (Oliver Watson, Ceramics from Islamic lands, London, 2004, cat.Jb.1, p.285). The style of the inscription carved around the shoulder of that jar also closely relates to that of the present piece. In his discussion of this piece, Watson describes this group of incised wares from Fatimid Egypt as "one of the hidden treasures of Islamic pottery".

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