Woman Carrying a Plate of Sweets thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at Young V&A
Imagine Gallery, Adventure, North wall

Woman Carrying a Plate of Sweets

Oil Painting
1810-1830 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This painting is part of a group purchased by the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1876. At the time, it was described as being, "From the Shah's palace at Tehran."

The painting may well have been removed from a palace erected by Fath 'Ali Shah (reigned 1797-1834). His residences were often decorated with series of oil paintings in this style, which were built into the walls. The individual paintings are usually portraits of a single, large human figure. The shapes of the figures are flattened out, but there is a great deal of decorative detail.

Many of the series painted for Fath 'Ali Shah show imaginary portraits of members of a royal harem. In this example, a woman offers a plate of sweets.

Painting in oils was introduced to Iran after 1600, when the country had strong commercial links with Europe. Production shrank during the troubled period after the Afghan invasion of Iran in 1722. It burst back into life under the Qajar dynasty, who re-united the country in the 1780s and 1790s. Fath 'Ali Shah was the second ruler of this dynasty, and his patronage led to this revival of oil painting.


Object details

Category
Object type
TitleWoman Carrying a Plate of Sweets (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Oil on calico
Brief description
Imaginary full-length portrait of a woman carrying a plate of sweets, in the style current under the Qajar ruler Fath 'Ali Shah (1797-1834).
Dimensions
  • Estimate height: 12cm
  • Estimate width: 21cm
Dimensions taken from C.M. Kauffmann, Catalogue of Foreign Paintings, II. 1800-1900, London, Victoria and Albert Museum, 1973
Style
Gallery label
  • Care for a sweet? This woman lived in the palace of the Shah, the old ruler of Iran. As a good host, she is offering a dish of tasty treats, shirini-ye ‘id-e badami, for everyone to enjoy. [Young V&A, Imagine Gallery short object label](2023)
  • Painting. Oil on calico. Full-length figure of a lady carrying a plate of sweetmeats. From the Shah's palace at Tehran. Persian. Early 19th century. H. 4ft 4in, W. 2ft 7in. Bought 1l 2s.(Inventory of Art Objects 1876-78)
Object history
When the painting was purchased, it was described as being, "From the Shah's palace at Tehran."
Historical context
"When a new dynasty, the Qajars, emerged at the end of the eighteenth century, portraits in oils began to assume a highly political function. The founder of the dynasty, Agha Muhammad (died 1797), had been castrated as youth by his father's enemies, and his successor, Fath 'Ali Shah (ruled 1797-1834), was keen to emphasize his masculinity. As a way of doing this, he commissioned numerous portraits of himself that showed him as slim-waisted, youthful and heavily bearded. Some were sent abroad as diplomatic gifts, and many were placed in his palaces, where they were flanked by paintings showing either an enormous entourage, including many of his sons and grandsons, or harem women engaged in the entertainment of their lord."
Tim Stanley, Palace and Mosque, p. 72
Summary
This painting is part of a group purchased by the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1876. At the time, it was described as being, "From the Shah's palace at Tehran."

The painting may well have been removed from a palace erected by Fath 'Ali Shah (reigned 1797-1834). His residences were often decorated with series of oil paintings in this style, which were built into the walls. The individual paintings are usually portraits of a single, large human figure. The shapes of the figures are flattened out, but there is a great deal of decorative detail.

Many of the series painted for Fath 'Ali Shah show imaginary portraits of members of a royal harem. In this example, a woman offers a plate of sweets.

Painting in oils was introduced to Iran after 1600, when the country had strong commercial links with Europe. Production shrank during the troubled period after the Afghan invasion of Iran in 1722. It burst back into life under the Qajar dynasty, who re-united the country in the 1780s and 1790s. Fath 'Ali Shah was the second ruler of this dynasty, and his patronage led to this revival of oil painting.
Bibliographic references
  • Persian Royal Portraiture and the Qajars, Robinson, B.W., Qajar Iran, Mazda, California, 1983,1992
  • Persian Oil Paintings, Robinson, B.W., V & A Small Colour Book 20, 1977
  • Diba, Layla S. (Ed.) Royal Persian Paintings: The Qajar Epoch, 1785-1925 London, 1998
Collection
Accession number
709-1876

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Record createdApril 2, 2007
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