Details
TWO IZNIK POTTERY TILES
OTTOMAN TURKEY, CIRCA 1580
Each of near square form, the white ground painted in bole-red, green, cobalt-blue and black outlines, with a section of a cusped palmette containing a floral spray on blue ground, surrounded by prunus blossom and a carnation and a tulip issuing from the lower edge, both with clean repaired breaks
Each 9¼ x 9½in. (23.5 x 24cm.) (2)
Provenance
Anon sale, Sotheby's, London, 25 April 1990, lot 432

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Sara Plumbly
Sara Plumbly

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Lot Essay

These tiles are of particular note because of the survival of the olive-brown colour used in the stems, which recalls the 'Damascus' style of the mid 16th century. A near identical tile panel, but formed of sixteen square tiles and with a palmette border, is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York gifted to them by J. Pierpoint Morgan in 1917 (Yanni Petsopoulos (ed.), Tulips, Arabesques and Turbans. Decorative Arts from the Ottoman Empire, London, 1982, no.128, p.134). Tiles with similar repeating patterns incorporating floral escutcheons decorate the Takyeci Ibrahim Aga Mosque in Istanbul, built in 1592, and the design continued to be popular in the early seventeenth century. A similar panel is now on view in the Louvre (ed.) Spgoie Makarion, Islamic At at The Musée de Louvre, Paris, 2012, pl. 182 p313.)

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