Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ceramics, Room 137, The Curtain Foundation Gallery

tile

Tile
ca. 1650 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Rectangular with the bottom left hand corner broken away. The tile is decorated with interlaced arabesques on a brown and green enamelled ground.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Titletile (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Earthenware decorated in cuerda seca
Brief description
Rectangular tile with blue and yellow arabesques on a brown and green enamelled ground.; Architecture, ceramic, glazed, Mughal, ca. 1650
Physical description
Rectangular with the bottom left hand corner broken away. The tile is decorated with interlaced arabesques on a brown and green enamelled ground.
Dimensions
  • Height: 12.4cm
  • Width: 20.3cm
  • Depth: 2.5cm
Styles
Object history
This tile is one of a group of 63 acquired in 1923 from Mr Frederick H. Andrews. He had been living in Srinagar where he had been Director of the Technical Institute of Kashmir and wrote to the museum in 1922 offering to sell his collection before he left that year to return to the UK. The tiles are said to have come from the tomb of Madani near But Kadal in Srinagar, Kashmir. The building dates from the mid-fifteenth century, but it was refurbished by a Mughal nobleman in Shah Jahan's time. The tiles probably were made in Lahore.
Collection
Accession number
IM.275-1923

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Record createdJune 25, 2009
Record URL
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