IRANICA: PRESERVATION: CATALOGUE

            
 

 

Cat. No. 11

Khamsa [Quintet] of Nizami

Shiraz, early 15th century

Ink, colors, and gold on paper ; 19th-century lacquer binding

Binding size : 11 x 7.8 cm

 

This diminutive manuscript bears many signs of its use over the centuries: text pages are stained and smeared, many of the paintings' finest details have flaked off, the binding has been replaced, and, in some cases, whole blocks of script and narrative illustration have been excised and remounted onto new sheets of paper. That this rare Persian manuscript remains intact is likely due, in part, to its size, which made it ill-suited for dismemberment and sale by individual painting - a practice that was quite common from the nineteenth to the twentieth century.

Cat. No. 11: battle of the clans

 

 

Cat. No. 11: nineteenth-century lacquer binding

 

 

Cat. No. 11: repaired folios with illumination

 

 

Cat. No. 12

Collection of didactic verse; Ni'matullah bin Reenu al-Abadeen Rud Bari, calligrapher

Tabriz, A.H. 934 (1527/28 C.E.)

Ink, colors, and gold on paper; stamped leather binding

Binding size: 20.9 x 12.7 cm

 

This small, illustrated text differs greatly from the celebrated Shah Tahmasp Shahnameh ('Book of Kings'), even though both manuscripts were produced in Tabriz, Iran, at around the same time. Containing only two paintings - compared to the Shahnameh's 258 - this collection of didactic verse would have interested early twentieth-century scholars and students of Islam more that it would have art collectors. Today, this book remains complete, while the Shah Tahmasp Shahnameh is divided among a number of museum and private collections.

Cat. No. 12: gathering of students

Cat. No. 12: stamped leather binding

 

 

Cat. No. 12: inscribed fly leaves

 

 

Cat. No. 13

Devotional miscellany; Mustafa [Kütahi], calligrapher

Ottoman Empire, A.H. 1185 (1771/1772 C.E.)

Ink, colors, and gold on paper

Paper size: 17.4 x 11.8 cm

Gift of Blanche Wolf Kohn '08

 

Unlike the other works in this exhibit, ths handsome prayer book hails from the Ottoman Empire, most likely from Istanbul. As appreciation for Ottoman book arts among Western collectors has long lagged behind that for Persian painting, the inclusion of this manuscript among Blanche Wolf Kohn's possessions (later gifted to Bryn Mawr College) attests to the unique collecting habits of those whose tastes extended beyond popular preferences.

Cat. No. 13: Muhammad's mantle

Cat. No. 13: paper binding adorned with a gold flower

 

Cat. No. 13: Medallions with the names of Muhammad and Allah

 

ESSAY

 

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