Plaster Figure thumbnail 1
Plaster Figure thumbnail 2
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Plaster Figure

1200-1250 (made)
Place of origin

Standing figure, made from plaster with remains of colour and gilding. A similar figure to A.21-1928 but slightly smaller. Wears long hair, a turban and a girdle with a tassel. The right arm (missing) was held up, the left hand was placed on the hip (arm missing). The tunic has traces of blue pigment, the stockings red, the hair black. The feet are missing. The figure has been broken across the middle and repaired.

This figure is related to A.21-1928 and A.22-1928, which were likewise both donated by Lady Marling.

A.23-1928 (mask, plaster with remains of colour) and A.24-1928 (plaster harpy) were also donated at the same time by Lady Marling. The pigments on A.23-1928 were analysed in 2006 by Raman spectroscopy, by Lucia Burgio in V&A's Conservation Science section. The bright red pigment (on the mouth and eyebrows) was identified as vermilion, the black (on the hair and eyes) gave a weak signal for carbon black, but no spectrum could be obtained for the dull yellow pigment (used for the eyes). See Conservation Science report no. 06-03-LB.

Object details

Category
Object type
Physical description
Standing figure, made from plaster with remains of colour and gilding. A similar figure to A.21-1928 but slightly smaller. Wears long hair, a turban and a girdle with a tassel. The right arm (missing) was held up, the left hand was placed on the hip (arm missing). The tunic has traces of blue pigment, the stockings red, the hair black. The feet are missing. The figure has been broken across the middle and repaired.

This figure is related to A.21-1928 and A.22-1928, which were likewise both donated by Lady Marling.

A.23-1928 (mask, plaster with remains of colour) and A.24-1928 (plaster harpy) were also donated at the same time by Lady Marling. The pigments on A.23-1928 were analysed in 2006 by Raman spectroscopy, by Lucia Burgio in V&A's Conservation Science section. The bright red pigment (on the mouth and eyebrows) was identified as vermilion, the black (on the hair and eyes) gave a weak signal for carbon black, but no spectrum could be obtained for the dull yellow pigment (used for the eyes). See Conservation Science report no. 06-03-LB.
Dimensions
  • Height: 46cm
  • Width: 23cm
  • Max depth: 11cm
measured MRO 2007
Style
Marks and inscriptions
  • Transliteration
Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
Rudolf Riefstahl, "Persian Islamic Stucco Sculptures: Representation of the Human Figure in Islamic Art", The Art Bulletin, vol. 13, no. 4 (Dec. 1931), pp. 439-463; A.22-1928 is illustrated in fig. 8
Collection
Accession number
A.22-1928

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Record createdSeptember 8, 2008
Record URL
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