Ewer thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Islamic Middle East, Room 42, The Jameel Gallery

Ewer

1602 (dated)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This ewer is the earliest dated example of its kind. The rectangular opening on the handle is inscribed on one side with the date and on the other with the name of the owner, Qasim. This man may well have been Qasim Beg Abdarbashi, who was in charge of serving drinks at royal receptions at this time.

Around 1550, a new type of brassware with fine, engraved decoration emerged in Iran. It featured stylised plants and other ornament in relief against a hatched ground, originally filled with a black compound. The decoration was often arranged in bands or cartouches that matched the shape of the object. Poetic inscriptions in the elegant ‘nasta’liq’ style of Persian calligraphy were also common. Human and animal motifs, absent since before 1400, reappeared. Here the animals appear in cartouches on the body of the ewer.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Brass, cast, engraved and inlaid with black composition
Brief description
Brass ewer, Iran (probably Isfahan), 1602.
Physical description
Brass, cast, engraved and inlaid with black composition. The Persian inscription invokes good luck for the owner, 'the servant of the King of Divine Friendship, Qasim', probably Qasim Beg Abdarbashi, the 'Master of Drinks'.
Dimensions
  • Height: 32cm
  • Diameter: 19cm
Styles
Gallery label
  • Jameel Gallery Brass Ewer Iran, probably Isfahan Dated 1602 This ewer is the earliest dated example of its kind. The rectangular opening on the handle is inscribed on one side with the date, and on the other with the name of the owner, Qasim. This man may well have been Qasim Beg Abdarbashi, who was in charge of serving drinks at royal receptions at this time. Brass engraved and filled with red and black compositions Museum no. 458-1876(Jameel Gallery)
  • Ewer Brass, cast, engraved and inlaid with black composition. The Persian inscription invokes good luck for the owner "The servant of the King of Divine Friendship Qasem", probably Mohammad Qasem Beg, the 'Master of Drinks ' WESTERN IRAN; dated 1602/3(Old label)
Summary
This ewer is the earliest dated example of its kind. The rectangular opening on the handle is inscribed on one side with the date and on the other with the name of the owner, Qasim. This man may well have been Qasim Beg Abdarbashi, who was in charge of serving drinks at royal receptions at this time.

Around 1550, a new type of brassware with fine, engraved decoration emerged in Iran. It featured stylised plants and other ornament in relief against a hatched ground, originally filled with a black compound. The decoration was often arranged in bands or cartouches that matched the shape of the object. Poetic inscriptions in the elegant ‘nasta’liq’ style of Persian calligraphy were also common. Human and animal motifs, absent since before 1400, reappeared. Here the animals appear in cartouches on the body of the ewer.
Associated object
Bibliographic reference
A. S. Melikian-Chirvani, Islamic Metalwork from the Iranian World, 8-18th Centuries, London, 1982, pp. 322-26, cat. no. 147.
Collection
Accession number
458-1876

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Record createdMarch 18, 2003
Record URL
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