Dish
1616-1642 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
The eight petal panels cover both flange and well. They are filled with either a slanting tube, two circles, a flower or a vase. A double circle surrounds the complex central lake scene representing a pagoda, rock formations with trees and a perched bird, a fishing boat with sail, a pleasure barge and small figures. Both vessels are half-moon shaped in the Persian version. The half-circle motif above the prow of the barge imitates a reed hut. The wide omega-shape at the top reproduces Chinese hills creating depth. The outer flange is decorated with two sets of tufts of grass, two butterflies, two Y-shaped rocks as dividers and four small vegetable clusters.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | White earthenware painted in two blues and black |
Brief description | Ceramic Dish, blue and white, Iran, 16th century |
Physical description | The eight petal panels cover both flange and well. They are filled with either a slanting tube, two circles, a flower or a vase. A double circle surrounds the complex central lake scene representing a pagoda, rock formations with trees and a perched bird, a fishing boat with sail, a pleasure barge and small figures. Both vessels are half-moon shaped in the Persian version. The half-circle motif above the prow of the barge imitates a reed hut. The wide omega-shape at the top reproduces Chinese hills creating depth. The outer flange is decorated with two sets of tufts of grass, two butterflies, two Y-shaped rocks as dividers and four small vegetable clusters. |
Dimensions |
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Style | |
Object history | This object was purchased in Tehran in 1873, by Robert Murdoch Smith on behalf of the Museum. In his first bulk acquisition for the South Kensington Museum (today the V&A), Murdoch Smith had bought "a considerable collection" of over 100 examples of metalwork, ceramic, inlaid woodwork and textile from different local sources, including French diplomat Emile Charles Bernay and four art-dealers: Nasrullah Dellal, Abu'l-Hassan Dellal, Abdul-Husayn and Reza Kashi of Tehran. Many further acquisitions followed in the years 1873-1878 and 1883-1885, most extensively from the art-dealer Jules Richard, long resident in Tehran. |
Historical context | Persian blue and white ceramics were primarily produced during the rule of the Safavid Dynasty in Iran (early 16th century to early 18th century). Iranian potters were almost exclusively preoccupied with making wares in the styles of Chinese blue-and-white porcelain some close copies and some more fanciful. Echoes of earlier traditions remained, in particular in the black-under-turquoise colour scheme that dates back in Iran to the end of the 12th century. Towards the end of the 16th century there was a widening of interest that blossomed in the 17th century to a wide range of styles and techniques in which blue and white plays a dominant but not exclusive role. |
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Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | 419-1874 |
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Record created | February 23, 2009 |
Record URL |
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