Tehran Floor Tile imitating Ikat Patterned Silk thumbnail 1
Not on display

Tehran Floor Tile imitating Ikat Patterned Silk

Tile
1850-1860 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Tile, design of blue chevron zigzags on white ground, in imitation of silk ikat weave, one of a set of four

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleTehran Floor Tile imitating Ikat Patterned Silk (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Buff-coloured coarse composite fritware, tin-opacified white slip, painted in blue pigment
Brief description
Middle East, Ceramic, Tile; Tile, coarse fritware, design of blue chevron zigzags on white ground, in imitation of silk ikat weave, one of a set of four, Tehran, Iran, 1850-60
Physical description
Tile, design of blue chevron zigzags on white ground, in imitation of silk ikat weave, one of a set of four
Dimensions
  • Length: 23.1cm
  • Width: 23.3cm
  • Depth: 1.8cm
Style
Object history
This colourful tile was bought in Tehran in 1876, for the South Kensington Museum (today the V&A). The Museum's agent Robert Murdoch Smith purchased a large collection of 154 "modern tiles", from the art-dealer Jules Richard, and described the group as "a collection of upwards of 100 modern tiles of different patterns such as are used for decorating walls and floors at the present day" (V&A Archives, 9 July 1875). Jules Richard had organised the tiles in 25 groups, of matching or mixed sets, showing the wonderful stylistic range of Qajar interior architecture: these range from geometric patterns, trellis repeats, landscape vignettes, architectonic compositions, bouquets of roses, Chinese famille rose porcelain styles, and even imitations of silk ikat pattern. In 1951, seven of the tiles were transferred to the Potteries Museum in Stoke-on-Trent.
Associated objects
Other numbers
  • CER.LOST OK.89 - Previous LOST number
  • Jules Richard group 18
  • 1531:36-1876 - previous number, assigned incorrectly
Collection
Accession number
1531:56-1876

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
Record URL
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