ewer
- Museum number
- OA+.739
- Description
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Ewer, made of stonepaste with a glossy opaque bluish-white glaze, piece moulded ribbed body on an irregular hexagonal foot; flattened pyriform shape. The curving spout ends in a dragon's head and the handle is in the form of a stylised clambering animal.
- Production date
- 17thC(late)
- Dimensions
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Height: 30 centimetres
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Width: 18 centimetres
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Depth: 12 centimetres
- $Inscriptions
-
- Curator's comments
- A similar brass example measuring 26.6 cm in height passed through Bonhams in London on 24th April 1997 (p.53, lot 360). Another example is in the Musee des Arts Decoratifs in Paris (cf. Melikian-Chirvani, 'Studies on Isfahan', II, pp.534-85, fig. 2).
The elongated ribbed shape of this slender ewer has been copied from an Indian metalwork prototype. Seventeenth-century Iranian imitations of popular Indian items may have been stimulated by demand from the large Indian community in Iran's diverse population.
Pale monochrome glazes were developed in the Islamic world in imitation of celadon-glazed stoneware imported from China. Celadon glaze is rich in iron, and a pale greyish-green in colour. In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, Iranian attempts to reproduce celadon resulted in bright turquoise or bottle-green glazes. The later Safavid period in Isfahan saw a revival of these earlier attempts. There was greater success with the colour of the glaze, as can be seen from the muted green of this ewer.
The Islamic world was obsessed with the imitation of Chinese ceramics. This became the motivation for many, but not all, new developments in ceramic-production. The high standard of Chinese luxury goods made this emulation inevitable: Al-Thalibi, an eleventh-century Persian scholar, wrote: 'The Arabs used to call every delicately or curiously made vessel, whatever its real origin, "Chinese", because finely made things are a speciality of China
In other Iranian pottery-centres, such as Mashhad and Kirman, craftsmen tried to copy Chinese blue and white porcelains." (from Compass entry July 25, 2006)
- Location
- On display (G43/dc1)
- Exhibition history
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Exhibited:
2007-2008 5 Oct-7 Jan, Paris, Musee du Louvre, 'The Song of the World: The Art of Safavid Iran 1501-1736'
- Acquisition date
- 1974
- Department
- Middle East
- Registration number
- OA+.739