Kalian
1650-1700 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
The designs on Safavid lustreware are purely Iranian, and owe nothing to Chinese designs, so prevalent in underglaze blue painted wares. Potters revived a three-hundred year old Iranian decorative technique in the second half of the Seventeenth century. However, the sources for the designs are found in contemporary manuscript illuminations, some dated about 1675.
A kalian is a tobacco pipe with a long flexible tube connected to a container where the smoke is cooled by passing through water. They are also known as a hookah, huqqa, qalian, qalyan, qaliyan, narghile, shisha, and a hubble-bubble.
A kalian is a tobacco pipe with a long flexible tube connected to a container where the smoke is cooled by passing through water. They are also known as a hookah, huqqa, qalian, qalyan, qaliyan, narghile, shisha, and a hubble-bubble.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Fritware, underglaze and lustre decoration |
Brief description | Kalian (water-pipe base), fritware, cobalt blue ground, overglaze painted in ruby-coloured lustre; Iran, 1650-1700. |
Physical description | Kalian or waterpipe base, fritware, cobalt blue ground, glazed and overglaze painted with metallic ruby lustre with plant forms and split-palmette bands. |
Dimensions |
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Style | |
Subject depicted | |
Summary | The designs on Safavid lustreware are purely Iranian, and owe nothing to Chinese designs, so prevalent in underglaze blue painted wares. Potters revived a three-hundred year old Iranian decorative technique in the second half of the Seventeenth century. However, the sources for the designs are found in contemporary manuscript illuminations, some dated about 1675. A kalian is a tobacco pipe with a long flexible tube connected to a container where the smoke is cooled by passing through water. They are also known as a hookah, huqqa, qalian, qalyan, qaliyan, narghile, shisha, and a hubble-bubble. |
Collection | |
Accession number | 985-1883 |
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Record created | June 24, 2009 |
Record URL |
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