Pen Box (Qalamdan)
1850-76 (made)
Place of origin |
The primary function of a pen box (qalamdan) was as a writing implement - made of papier mache, wood or other materials, including precious metals – intended to hold a number of tools associated with the art and act of writing, including reed pens, an inkwell, liqah (a cotton wool substance used to absorb excess ink), a penknife, a qat’zan (a flat resting board made of horn), a whetstone, a small spoon, and a pair of scissors. These accessories were considered essential elements for a scribe. The box that kept these elements was deemed, by association, as important as the person who handled its contents, with the quality of the box’s decoration directly reflecting the status of the scribe or patron.
Pen boxes were carried by penmen of all ranks, often tucked into the shawls tied around their waists, symbolising a badge of their trade. So esteemed was the pen box that even Shahs commissioned them; these rare examples are confirmed by their inscriptions. The earliest specimens of this type date from the reign of Shah Sulayman Safavi (1664-95), but later Qajar examples commissioned by members of high bureaucracy also exist throughout the nineteenth century.
Although this particular pen box does not bear the inscription of the artist Ya Shah-I Najaf (‘O King of Najaf!’), the detail of decoration and its style strongly resembles that of the known Qajar artist, or perhaps another from his circle. Aqa Najaf, as he is also known, was responsible for lacquer pieces produced sometime between the 1810s and the 1860s, with a style that formed a bridge between the works of the later 18th century and the long reign of Nasir al-Din Shah Qajar (1848-1896), during which the sons of Najaf Ali continued to play a leading role in lacquer production.
Pen boxes were carried by penmen of all ranks, often tucked into the shawls tied around their waists, symbolising a badge of their trade. So esteemed was the pen box that even Shahs commissioned them; these rare examples are confirmed by their inscriptions. The earliest specimens of this type date from the reign of Shah Sulayman Safavi (1664-95), but later Qajar examples commissioned by members of high bureaucracy also exist throughout the nineteenth century.
Although this particular pen box does not bear the inscription of the artist Ya Shah-I Najaf (‘O King of Najaf!’), the detail of decoration and its style strongly resembles that of the known Qajar artist, or perhaps another from his circle. Aqa Najaf, as he is also known, was responsible for lacquer pieces produced sometime between the 1810s and the 1860s, with a style that formed a bridge between the works of the later 18th century and the long reign of Nasir al-Din Shah Qajar (1848-1896), during which the sons of Najaf Ali continued to play a leading role in lacquer production.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Parts | This object consists of 2 parts.
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Materials and techniques | Lacquered papier-mache |
Brief description | Oblong shaped pen box with rounded edges depicting portrait busts, Iran, Qajar period, 1850-76 |
Physical description | Oblong shaped pen box made of lacquered papier-mache and painted with a vertically disposed composition on the top of the cover with three portrait busts of European dressed women within scalloped edged medallions, set against a polychrome floral background with birds. On the sides are Europeanized figural scenes divided by oval portrait busts of young women. The base is dark red, decorated in gold with birds amongst a fruiting vine. |
Dimensions |
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Summary | The primary function of a pen box (qalamdan) was as a writing implement - made of papier mache, wood or other materials, including precious metals – intended to hold a number of tools associated with the art and act of writing, including reed pens, an inkwell, liqah (a cotton wool substance used to absorb excess ink), a penknife, a qat’zan (a flat resting board made of horn), a whetstone, a small spoon, and a pair of scissors. These accessories were considered essential elements for a scribe. The box that kept these elements was deemed, by association, as important as the person who handled its contents, with the quality of the box’s decoration directly reflecting the status of the scribe or patron. Pen boxes were carried by penmen of all ranks, often tucked into the shawls tied around their waists, symbolising a badge of their trade. So esteemed was the pen box that even Shahs commissioned them; these rare examples are confirmed by their inscriptions. The earliest specimens of this type date from the reign of Shah Sulayman Safavi (1664-95), but later Qajar examples commissioned by members of high bureaucracy also exist throughout the nineteenth century. Although this particular pen box does not bear the inscription of the artist Ya Shah-I Najaf (‘O King of Najaf!’), the detail of decoration and its style strongly resembles that of the known Qajar artist, or perhaps another from his circle. Aqa Najaf, as he is also known, was responsible for lacquer pieces produced sometime between the 1810s and the 1860s, with a style that formed a bridge between the works of the later 18th century and the long reign of Nasir al-Din Shah Qajar (1848-1896), during which the sons of Najaf Ali continued to play a leading role in lacquer production. |
Bibliographic reference | Nasser Khalili, B.W. Robinson, and Tim Stanley, Lacquer of the Islamic Lands (London: The Nour Foundation, 1997) |
Collection | |
Accession number | 767:1-1876 |
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Record created | June 24, 2009 |
Record URL |
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