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Lot 162: Scène de chasse Panneau fragmentaire composé de carreaux de revêtement mural en céramique peinte en polychromie, sous glaçure transparente. Sous une arcature à découpe festonnée avec les écoinçons ornés d'un lion terrassant une gazelle, ce déroule

Est: €800 EUR - €1,200 EURPassed
OsenatOctober 27, 2012Fontainebleau, France

Item Overview

Description

Scène de chasse Panneau fragmentaire composé de carreaux de revêtement mural en céramique peinte en polychromie, sous glaçure transparente.
Sous une arcature à découpe festonnée avec les écoinçons ornés d'un lion terrassant une gazelle, ce déroule une scène de chasse.
On distingue un chasseur à l'arc, deux lions et une gazelle.
Encadrement de rinceaux fleuris en réserve sur fond bleu.
Iran, art Qajar, XIXe siècle

Notes

Pottery is perhaps the earliest and the most important invention made by man.
For historians and archaeologists it is the most significant of the artistic manifestations.
Ceramic production presents a continuous history from the beginning until the present day.
For historians and archaeologists pottery of a certain period manifests the contemporary social organisation, economic conditions and cultural stage of that particular region.
By studying pottery one may form impressions about the life, the religion of people and their history, about their social relationships, their attitude towards their neighbours, to their own world and even to their interpretation of the universe as it was then known to them.
Other media, e.
g.
metal and textiles can be destroyed, or re-used, but pottery is indestructible, and even small fragments reveal a great deal of information for an expert.
  In Iran pottery manufacture has a long and brilliant history.
Due to the special geographical position of the country, being at the crossroads of ancient civilizations and on important caravan routes, almost every part of Iran was, at times, involved in pottery making.
Yet, recent excavations and archaeological research revealed that there were four major pottery-manufacturing areas in the Iranian plateau.
These included the western part of the country, namely the area west of the Zagros mountains (Lurestan), and the area south of the Caspian Sea (Gilan and Mazandaran).
These two areas are chronologically as far as is known today, the earliest.
The third region is located in the northwestern part of the country, in Azarbaijan.
The fourth area is in the southeast, i.
e.
the Kerman region and Baluchestan.
To these four regions one may also add the Kavir area, where the history of pottery making can be dated back to the 8th millennium BCE.
    PREHISTORIC PERIOD (Pls.
1-40) One of the earliest known and excavated prehistoric sites that produced pottery is Ganj Darreh Tappeh in the Kermanshah region, dating back to the 8th millennium BCE Another great discovery was made south of the Caspian Sea in a cave, in the so-called Kamarband, (Belt cave) near present day Behshahr.
Here again the pottery finds date to 8000 BCE.
This type of pottery in known to experts as the "Kamarband Neolithic pottery".
This pottery was fired at a low temperature, and its body is very soft.
Not far from the above-mentioned cave there was another, called Huto.
The pottery there, from a technical point of view, shows similarities to that of Cheshmeh Ali in Ray, near Tehran.
  The second phase of development in pottery-making in Iran is represented by the wares that were discovered at Cheshmeh Ali, Tappeh Sialk near Kashan and at Zagheh in the Qazvin plain.
The pottery of these centres is different from that of the earlier periods.
Their paste is a mixture of clay, straw and small pieces of various plants, which can be found and collected in the desert.
When mixed with water they stick well together and form a very hard paste.
All these vessels were made by hand rather than on a wheel.
As the potters were unable to control the temperature of the kilns, there was no stable colour for these wares.
It varied from grey and dark grey to black, occasionally even appearing with a greenish colour.
The type of vessels produced was limited, mainly bowls with concave bases and globular bodies.
Their surfaces were painted mostly in red depicting geometrical patterns.
The date of these wares is ca.
the 6th and 5th millennium BCE.
  In the subsequent periods pottery-making became more and more refined.
Although the wheel still had not been introduced, the shapes of the vessels became somewhat more varied and more carefully executed .
The temperature in the kilns was better controlled and the decoration of the vessels now included animals and stylised floral designs.
Numerous examples of these have been unearthed at Sialk.
To achieve a finer paste, the potters added fine sand-powder to the mixture that has already been mentioned.
Thus they were able to produce vessels with a very thin body.
  With the invention and the introduction of the potter's wheel, ca.
the 4th millennium BCE, it became possible to produce better quality and symmetrically-shaped vessels; the number of pottery types made was greatly increased as well.
The decoration of these objects was drawn with much greater care and artistic skill, and the designs used were greatly enriched and carefully selected.
By that time this more advanced type of pottery was produced in several parts of Iran.
Thus it reveals the close economic and cultural ties that must have existed then amongst prehistoric communities.
Ideas, techniques and artistic trends must have travelled great distances and were freely exchanged.
A good example to demonstrate this connection is the pottery types that were unearthed at Tappeh Qabrestan in the Qazvin plain, which are comparable to those from Sialk and Tappeh Hissar near Damghan, all of the same period.
The location of these three places forms a kind of triangle.
One may presume that further archaeological work will produce more evidence for the close ties that existed amongst these communities.
  Around the 2nd millennium BCE in most parts of Iran we have evidence of local pottery manufacture.
The vessels usually consist of bowls, pitchers, jugs, and jars.
Most of these wares are simple, without any surface decorations.
The colour of these wares varies from grey to dark grey, red to buff.
Some of these have burnished surfaces and are decorated with geometrical patterns (pls.
7-8).
  The most beautiful wares of that period, however, are the zoomorphic vessels (humped bulls, camels, rams, etc.
) (pls.
29-33) or human figurines, which were mainly discovered in the Gilan region (Marlik, Amlash and Kaluraz).
The zoomorphic vessels and figurines must have had two distinct functions: some of them were utility vessels, used in everyday life, while others, probably more important, were used in religious ceremonies or in burials (pl.
35).
Quite a wide variety of shapes is known today.
Their actual function may be determined by the shape of the vessels and by the gesture of the figurines.
The manufacture of these zoomorphic vessels and figurines continued until the middle of the 1st millennium BCE.
    MEDIAN AND ACHAEMENID DYNASTIC PERIODS (Pls.
29-33, 35 & 41-42) Our knowledge of Median pottery is rather limited.
Recent excavations, however, particularly at one of the most important Median sites, Tappeh Nush-i Jan near Malayer, produced a great variety of vessels.
These are still under study and examination.
It is hoped in the near future a great deal can be learnt about the pottery of that important period.
At other sites, e.
g.
Bistun, in several places in Gilan and in Kurdestan Median pottery has also been recovered (Pls.
36-40).
Recent excavations at the site of Ziwiyeh conducted by the Iranian Centre for Archaeological Research produced a good sampling Median pottery.
One of the most important innovations in ceramic technology appeared during the Median period, i.
e.
the introduction of glazed ware, although the earliest evidence for the use of glaze on bricks was the discovery of glazed bricks in the Elamite Temple at Choga Zanbil, dated to the 13th century BCE.
  With the coming of the Achaemenids in the 6th century BCE great advances were made in pottery manufacture.
The simple ware became more popular and widespread.
It was nevertheless in the finer wares that progress is most noticeable.
New shapes were introduced, e.
g.
the rhyton.
The surfaces were now decorated with incised and moulded designs.
Certain prehistoric traditions have survived and continued.
This is perhaps best observed in the application of animal figurines.
These are attached to the handles of jars and rhytons.
It is widely accepted that these figurines had iconographic significance.
  Shapes and decorations of Achaemenid pottery disclose close connections between pottery-making and metalworking.
Frequently metal shapes and decorations are produced, and one may add, successfully, in pottery.
It is during the Achaemenid period that glazing was introduced generally into Iran.
Excavations at Susa revealed that the walls of palaces were covered with glazed bricks, which included elaborate decorations, depicting animals and soldiers.
The practice of glazing must have been introduced from Mesopotamia.
    PARTHIAN DYNASTIC PERIOD (Pis.
43-46) Until quite recently information on the arts of the Parthian period was rather meagre.
At the time when the late Professor Arthur Upham Pope and his team were collecting material for the Survey of Persian Art, hardly any Parthian site was known and none was excavated.
It was only during the last twenty or thirty years that a few extremely important Parthian sites were investigated by archaeologists.
Some of these are beyond the present borders of Iran, e.
g.
Nyssa, the former Parthian capital in Soviet Central Asia, or Dura-Europos in Syria.
More recently in Iran a number of Parthian sites have been located and are, at present, under excavation.
These sites are Kangavar, Shahr-i Qumis and several sites in the Gurgan plain, in Gilan and Sistan.
  From these new archaeological discoveries we have learnt a great deal about Parthian art and Parthian pottery.
In a recent study it has been pointed out that pottery was not the same throughout the Parthian Empire and the wares of Iran proper were different from those of Syria and Mesopotamia.
Even in this area several differences are recognisable.
In general, Parthian pottery can be divided into two major groups: unglazed and glazed wares.
The unglazed wares can be further subdivided into two categories: namely grey and red wares.
The grey pottery consists of bowls, small cups and large jars, all with convex bases and without any surface decoration.
Some of them, nevertheless, have a polished body.
The red ware, which was perhaps the most popular, also included large jars, bowls and jugs, similar in shape to those of the grey wares.
They have everted rims.
Under the red ware another type, the so-called "clinky" ware should be mentioned.
This ware has a very fine thin body which is red outside and dark grey inside; when tapped it gives a clinking sound, hence its name.
  It also should be noted that zoomorphic vessels, in the shape of rhytons, were still very popular in Parthian times (Pls.
43-45).
These were made both in grey and in red, occasionally even in buff earthenware.
  One of the greatest achievements in pottery-making during this period was the introduction of alkaline-glazed vessels.
The body of these glazed wares was a fine white paste on which the alkaline glaze could be easily applied.
Two of the most common types of vessels in this group were the "pilgrim flask"", and large bowls.
The latter usually rest on three or four short legs (pl.
46).
These types of vessels may have been produced under Far Eastern influence, since their forms recall contemporary Chinese bronzes.
  In addition to glazing, most of these Parthian glazed vessels reveal some kind of surface decoration, mostly simple incised lines or strokes.
Another, rather important, group of Parthian glazed pottery were the large coffins which became widely used at that period due to a change in religious beliefs concerning burial.
      SASANIAN DYNASTIC PERIOD (Pis.
47-54) In general it could be stated that Sasanian pottery is, strictly speaking, a continuation of Parthian traditions, with two exceptions; The grey ware was practically discontinued, as were the glazed coffins, since Zoroastrian burial customs were re-introduced.
  Sasanian pottery thus can be subdivided into two major groups: unglazed and glazed wares.
The unglazed wares were mainly of heavily potted red wares.
These include large jars, jugs, and various types of bowls.
They have thick, everted rims and their surfaces now reveal intricate incised or stamped decorations, including wavy lines, geometrical patterns, rosettes, or occasionally, even Pahlavi inscriptions.
The number of these Sasanian red wares is constantly increasing.
They have been discovered at a number of sites, such as Bishapur; Siraf, Kangavar, the Gurgan plain, Turang Tappeh, Takht-i Sulayman,at Ghubayra near Kerman and Takht-i Abunasar in Fars Province.
  Glazed pottery, although the alkaline glaze was still used, has in fact considerably advanced technologically.
Instead of the Parthian dark green or brownish-yellow glaze, the most important colour now becomes turquoise green, or turquoise blue.
This is to be found on a number of pilgrim flasks (pl.
54), bowls and particularly on large storage jars.
These storage jars, which have recently been unearthed at Siraf and also at Ghubayra, in addition to glazing, were also decorated with appliqué patterns, most frequently with cable patterns, which run around the upper part or on the shoulder of the vessels.
  Terracotta figurines were also produced in Sasanian times, of which a great variety are known today (pls.
51-53).
Some of these are partially glazed (pl.
51).
      THE POST-SASANIAN PERIOD With the advent of Islam during the first half of the 7th century CE, pottery manufacture gradually started to change all over the Islamic world.
At the beginning Islamic potters continued their pre-Islamic traditions, and in Iran some of these early wares are known as "Sasano-Islamic".
It has been suggested that due to contact with the Far East, particularly with China, on one hand and to the restrictions of orthodox Islam on the other, considerable changes gradually took place in pottery-making, and several new types of wares were produced.
Potters of the Near East made several experiments, partly imitating imported Far Eastern wares, partly using their own skill and imagination in inventing new types.
  In general the history of Islamic pottery can be divided into three main periods Post-Sasanian or Early Islamic Period (9th - 10th centuries CE) Middle Islamic Period (11th - 15th centuries CE) Later Islamic Period (16th - 19th centuries CE)   In these three periods, which lasted for more than a thousand years, numerous pottery centres were established, which produced innumerable types of wares.
Recent excavations in famous Islamic cities, e.
g.
Samarra, Siraf, Nishapur, Jorjan, Fustat, etc.
, together with the discovery of pottery kilns at several sites, provide us with considerable information on pottery manufacture in the Islamic world.
It is worthwhile to emphasize that in pottery manufacture Iran and the Iranian world was always ahead of the rest of the Islamic worlc'a, and it was always Iranian potters who experimented most widely with new types and new ideas.
  EARLY ISLAMIC PERIOD The most important information on early Islamic pottery was, for a long time, provided by the German excavations at the short-lived early Abbasid capital of Samarra.
Recently, several other Islamic sites have been investigated and these have considerably altered, and at the same time enriched our knowledge of the subject.
In our investigation we are restricting our interest to Iran and accordingly, we shall deal only with the pottery of two early dynasties, namely that of the Buyids and the Samanids.
  BUYIDS DYNASTY (932-1055 CE) Although we have no examples here of pottery of this period and dynasty, it should be mentioned that the most common type of pottery was the so-called "guebri", better known as champleve, ware.
The decoration of this pottery comes very close to Sasanian metalwork and pottery.
This ware, it appears, was produced at Zenjan, Garrus, Amol and Sari.
It was actually a kind of sgraffiato technique (the term ehampleve is actually a metalwork technique and should not be applied for pottery), where the surface of the vessels, which always had a red earthenware body, was covered with thick white slip and the decorations were carved away.
The vessels then were coated with transparent green or yellow lead glaze.
The decorations of these wares include floral, geometrical or epigraphic designs, and frequently human and animals figures as well.
The types of vessels made include bowls, dishes, and jugs; even a few plaques are known.
    SAMANID DYNASTY (819-999 CE) (Pis.
55-76) The Samanids were probably one of the most important dynasties in the eastern part of the Islamic world during the early Islamic period.
Their realm included large centres like Samarkand (Afrasiyab), Bukhara, Merv, Nishapur and Kerman.
The most important contribution of Samanid artists to Islamic pottery-making was the invention and perfection of the slip-painted ware.
There are several types of this ware known today, and in general can be divided into the following main groups black on white, polychrome on white, decoration on coloured ground slip imitation of monochrome lustre.
  These slip-painted wares constitute a great advance in pottery decoration.
Normally the pigment runs in the kiln under the lead glaze, as it was practiced in Mesopotamia in early Abbasid times on splashed wares.
By the introduction of a ground slip and slip pigments, potters could control the designs while in the kiln, and thus were able to produce a great variety of surface decorations.
  Perhaps the most appealing, and at the same time chronologically one of the earliest wares was the one which depicted epigraphic designs in manganese-purple on white or creamy ground slip and then was covered by clear glaze.
The earlier the piece the finer the epigraphic decoration is.
These are also legible, mostly including benedictory phrases.
As time went on the epigraphic design became more and more decorative and less and less legible.
The introduction of polychrome over white or creamy ground can also be considered as the second step in the development of slip-painted pottery.
These polychrome painted wares were now decorated not only with epigraphic designs, but also with flowers, arabesques or even ewers or other vessels.
  The decorative scheme is reversed when the decoration is painted in white or light colours over a manganese-purple or tomato-red ground.
Quite a number of these vessels are known today.
They were excavated at several sites in Soviet Central Asia, Afghanistan, at Nishapur, Jorjan and even at Ghubayra in Kerman province.
  Quite a different type, but an important group is the polychrome buff ware, decorated with human and animal figures, or rarely only with geometrical forms.
The late Arthur Lane called this type of pottery "peasant ware" of Nishapur.
What is extremely important to note is that this type of pottery was never produced except in Nishapur, or even imitated anywhere else.
The decoration may give some indication of Samanid painting, of which we have only a few examples, namely the excavated wall frescoes of Nishapur.
A sub-group of this polychrome buff ware was until recently known as "Sari ware".
This is decorated with walking birds, large flowers, and occasionally with Kufic epigraphic characters.
The term "Sari" cannot be really accepted, since there is no evidence of manufacture of such pottery in Sari, but recently such wares and kilns have been excavated at Jorjan.
  There is another group of slip-painted pottery, painted in olive-green on white or creamy ground; clearly an imitation of contemporary monochrome lustre-painted pottery.
The question whether lustre-painted pottery, either in monochrome or in polychrome, was produced under the Samanids, is still not clear and has not been solved.
It is a fact that a large number of such wares, both polychrome and monochrome lustre, were excavated at Nishapur, and thousands of such fragments are now coming to light in Jorjan; although as yet we still have no archaeological evidence for their local manufacture.
  The second important type of Samanid pottery is that of the sgraffiato wares (pls.
74-77).
One type of sgraffiato, the "guebri", or "champleve" ware, has already been mentioned under Buyid pottery, so this will be excluded here.
The other three types, which played an important role in Iran under the Samanids, were the so-called simple sgraffiato, also known as "Amol" ware, the splashed and sgraffiato ware, and the so-called "Aghkand" ware.
  The simple, or "Amol" sgraffiato pottery is decorated with incised lines, right down to the body through the thin slip which covers it, then coated with transparent yellow or green glaze.
The decoration may include simple crosshatchings, scrollwork, epigraphic designs, birds or fantastic animals.
Occasionally these incised lines may be outlined in green.
The vessels are mostly bowls, with projecting flat bases and straight flaring sides.
The body is always red.
Until recently neither dated.
nor signed pieces had been discovered.
A short while ago a small fragment was discovered in the Gurgan plain, with the signature of an artist: Rahman ibn Musa al-Fakhkhar.
  The second type of sgraffiato, the so-called splashed sgraffiato ware is actually a direct continuation of the Mesopotamian early Abbasid splashed wares.
Its invention was most likely due to the ingenuity of Persian artists, who were not satisfied by simply producing splashes of brown, yellow and green under a clear glaze.
They further enhanced the decoration of their vessels by incised decorations which at first were simple scrolls, but later included elaborate designs, such as eagles with spread wings or animals.
This type has been excavated at Jorjan, Nishapur, Kangavar, Takht-i Sulayman, Susa and other sites in Iran.
  The third type of sgraffiato.
the "Aghkand" ware, is actually similar to a metalwork technique, incised lines are introduced to certain designs in order to stop the overflow of the pigment to neighbouring areas.
Large birds, animals and flowers decorate these vessels, which are mainly large bowls or dishes.
It has been claimed that this type of pottery was actually made in Aghkand.
    MIDDLE ISLAMIC PERIOD (11TH-15TH CENTURIES CE) THE SELJUQ PERIOD (11TH CENTURY TO 1220 CE) At the beginning of the 11th century CE a new dynasty, the Seljuqs came to Iran and unified the country under their rule, and for a while also brought into their realm Iraq and Syria.
Another branch of the Seljuqs, the Rumi Seljuqs, established themselves in Anatolia.
  This period under Seljuq rule in Iran lasted for hardly more than one and a half centuries, yet it witnessed great progress in literature, philosophy, in architecture and in all fields of the arts.
The Seljuqs became great patrons of the arts and their patronage made it possible for artists to develop new techniques in metalwork and in pottery.
  The most important achievement in pottery production was the introduction of a new composite white frit material.
This new white body made the application of alkaline glaze easier; the actual body of the vessels was considerably thinner, almost translucent.
Thus Seljuq potters had nearly achieved the fineness of imported Chinese Sung porcelain which potters of the Near East greatly admired.
Cities like Ray, Kashan, Jorjan, and Nishapur became the main centres of pottery production.
Under Seljuq patronage the following types of wares were produced in Iran: ? white wares, ? monochrome glazed wares, ? carved or laqabi wares, ? lustre-painted wares, ? underglaze-painted wares, and ? overglaze-painted, so-called minai and lajvardina wares.
  Another type, which has to be added to these, is the unglazed ware, which has also gone through considerable changes and refinement.
It should also be noted, that while the Seljuqs were actually replaced by the Khwarizmshahs towards the second half of the 12th century, artistically the same trend continued in Iran right up to the Mongol invasion.
  WHITE WARES (Pis.
78-86) White wares were perhaps the most attractive of the period.
As has already been mentioned, they were produced in imitation of Chinese white Sung porcelain.
The fine thin white body was covered with clear glaze, which occasionally has a light greenish tinge, which makes it even more attractive.
  According to their decoration, these white wares can be divided into the following groups: plain white wares without any surface decoration, their beauty being in their shapes and in their fine paste and glaze; those which have moulded or incised decoration of either simple lines, scrollwork or elaborate floral designs, or occasionally even Naskhi or Kufic inscriptions; vessels with openwork decoration which are pierced on the body to form little windows which are then filled by the clear glaze, thus making the vessel even more translucent; and finally, wares which have cobalt blue splashes.
  Most of the vessels that are known today are bowls, jugs or occasionally cups.
Some of them reveal a combination of the various decorative techniques mentioned above, e.
g.
moulded or incised decoration, openwork and cobalt blue splashes applied on the same vessel.
It appears that the white wares were made in Kashan, Jorjan and perhaps even in Ray.
     MONOCHROME GLAZED WARES (Pis.
81-96) This type of ware was perhaps the most common all over Iran, and was later copied everywhere in the Islamic world.
The colour of the glaze ranges from blue.
through green, turquoise, brown to yellow, and purple.
Almost every type of vessel was covered with these glazes, including bowls, jugs, tankards, pitchers, utility objects and zoomorphic vessels.
  The decoration of these wares, just like those of the white ware, varies greatly.
Most of them are simple, covered only with the coloured glaze, others may be decorated with incised, moulded, stamped or even carved decoration.
The decorations include scrollwork and epigraphic inscriptions, these mostly applied on jars, jugs and vases, running round the shoulder of the vessels; others, which are more elaborate, may include human and animal figures.
One of the most frequent animate themes is the representation of dancing figures.
These vessels were most likely made in moulds.
Such moulds were discovered in the excavations of Nishapur and at Jorjan.
There are a few fine pieces known, on which the carved decoration is outlined in thin red or gold lines.
The monochrome glazed wares were made in Nishapur, Kashan, Jorjan and most likely at Ray.
      CARVED OR LAQABI WARES This type of pottery is actually a re-interpretation of the "Aghkand" ware in white frit ware, in which the decoration of the surface was carved and the raised or incised lines used for stopping the overflow of the various colours.
Most of these vessels, which are large plates or jugs, are decorated with a large bird, animal or a human figure in the centre, surrounded by a cobalt blue cable pattern over white ground.
  The origin of this ware is much debated.
Most scholars believe that it originated in Egypt and thence spread to Syria.
French scholars have discovered kilns and kiln-wasters in Raqqa in Syria.
In Iran it was believed that the ware was produced only in Ka han or Ray, but so far no archaeological evidence has been discovered.
If this ware was ever produced in Iran, it must have been only for a short period during the 12th century CE       LUSTRE-PAINTED WARES (Pis.
97-103) The origin of lustre painting has been the subject of bitter discussion amongst scholars.
Mesopotamia, Egypt and Iran have all been suggested as the original centres.
The problem still has not been solved, and it is not our aim here to deal with this in any length.
It, however, is a fact that lustrepainting was applied on glass by Coptic workers as early as the 7th or 8th century CE In Samarra the German excavators have found large numbers of lustre-painted pottery and even tiles in situ, thus indicating a 9th century CE date for lustre-painting on pottery.
After the rise of the Fatimid dynasty and their foundation of Cairo in 969 CE, the centre of lustre production is definitely concentrated in Egypt.
During Fatimid and Tulunid rules outstanding lustre-painted pottery was produced in Egypt, some of which depicted not only human figures but also scenes from everyday life.
Around the end of the 12th century CE, it seems that the potters left.
Egypt and were looking for patronage elsewhere.
Some of them went to Syria, or Anatolia, where they gained the support of the Rumi Seljuqs in Konya.
Others, however, came to Iran and set up their centre or centres somewhere in the country.
  According to Pope and Lane, who wrote in detail about the lustre production in Iran, there were three main lustre producing centres in the country: Ray, Kashan and Saveh.
Unfortunately there were no proper scholarly excavations at Kashan and Saveh, thus we have no archaeological evidence to support this surmise.
The lustre production at Kashan, however, is well substantiated by the signature of several artists from Kashan and by Abu'l-Qasim's treatise, who claimed that lustre and several other types of pottery were produced in that city.
The problem is different with Ray.
In the mid thirties there were scholarly excavations at Ray, but these did not produce the evidence that was expected.
The present excavations in Ray by Iranian archaeologists again failed to trace any evidence of local lustre production.
Accordingly the theory that Ray or Saveh were lustre producing centres has to be approached with great caution.
  There is a broken jar in the British Museum in London, which is, as far as is known today the earliest dated lustre object.
It gives the date of 575 A.
H.
/1179 CE It was believed to be a Ray product.
The inscription nevertheless does not state the place where it was made, but simply gives the date.
Recently another dated vessel, a bowl, came to light in a private collection which is much earlier than the British Museum jar.
The date on this bowl is 504 A.
H.
/1114 CE This piece, if genuine, could considerably alter our views on lustre production in Iran.
It is painted in the "Kashan" style.
This vessel is still under investigation and detailed scrutiny, therefore no conclusion can be made at this stage.
  As for the lustre styles of Ray, Kashan and Saveh, Pope and Lane claimed that in Ray lustre compositions were never crowded.
There was usually one large animal or human figure in the centre, or if several figures were represented, they were carefully separated from each other by geometrical bands or scrollwork.
Pope distinguished' two periods in lustre production at Ray: the miniature style and the monumental style.
As for Kashan, it was generally accepted by a number of scholars that compositions were always densely crowded; human figures were depicted with round faces, with Mongolian features including large almond-shaped eyes; their garments were richly decorated.
In the foreground on most vessels there is a pond with fishes; above, there is a stylized sky and the entire central field is surrounded by tassel-like marks.
The leaves have veins and dots; the typical "Kashan" pigeon is present on most pieces, while on the outside of the vessels there is a kind of "heart-shaped" leaf.
  It was also on typical Kashan wares that cobalt blue, or occasionally even turquoise glaze was added to the lustre decoration.
Apart from vessels, Kashan potters also produced large numbers of tiles and mihrabs, some of which were made up of several lustre tiles.
Quite a number of these lustre mihrabs and.
tiles are dated and signed.
The family of Abu Taher a documented potter, contributed outstanding artists to Kashan for three generations.
  In regard to the possibility of lustre production at Saveh, it was the late Professor Arthur Upham Pope who put forward such a theory.
He also claimed that he collected kiln-wasters there.
Unfortunately, as has already been pointed out, there were no excavations at Saveh and accordingly this surmise cannot be either supported or disproved.
  Another important place, not yet mentioned in the Survey of Persian Art, is Jorjan, where during the 2nd World War important discoveries were made.
Turkomans unearthed some 20 or 25 large unglazed jars in which complete pottery vessels packed in sand were placed, probably before the Mongol invasion in 1220 CE Subsequently the late Dr.
Mehdi Bahraini, who was then Director of the Iran Bastan Museum in Tehran, carried out his own investigations and then published his book, Gurgan Faiences.
His book was received with great scepticism by several Iranian and Western scholars, Unfortunately he died before his book, which was published posthumously, came out of the press.
During the past seven years the Iranian Centre for Archaelological Research has carried out excavations at Jorjan under the direction of the present writer.
During these archaeological investigations six pottery kilns and one glass kiln were unearthed.
At first there was evidence of local production of slip-painted, sgraffiato and monochrome glazed pottery.
It was only during the last year that evidence for lustre production came to light.
Several kiln-wasters and several ceramic sticks used in kilns and tripods with traces of lustre on them were found in the potters' quarter.
Thus it seems that Bahraini's theory of lustre production in Jorjan has now been satisfactorily proved.
  When analysing the possible individual style of Jorjan, at first glance one may come to the conclusion that the ware is painted entirely in the Kashan manner.
It is perhaps even logical to suppose that there must have been a close contact between the two centres, and one can even suggest that perhaps the potters of Jorjan had studied at Kashan, and later moved up to Jorjan, or vice versa.
On several vessels, on the lower side of jugs and bottles, or inside bowls, there is an unusual "chain-scrolh" motif, a pattern that has never been noted on "typical Kashan" vessels, but is present on most of the lustre vessels discovered in Jorjan during World War II or on thosewhich were excavated recently.
This pattern may be one of the attributes of Jorjan lustre.
It is perhaps still too early to discuss the lustre painting production and style of Jorjan in great detail, but the problem is now under investigation and a full report will shortly appear.
  It is perhaps not entirely out of place to refer here again to the question of early lustre painting.
It was again in Jorjan that several hundreds of early polychrome and lustre-painted sherds came to light during the excavations.
The above mentioned lustre bowl with its early date may completely alter our approach and interpretation of the history of lustre painting.
If this early dated vessel is genuine, as it looks to be, then it simply means that lustre-painted pottery was produced in Iran well before the fall of the Fatimids in Egypt.
Since there are numerous fragments of early polychrome and lustre sherds at Jorjan, but also at other places, e.
g.
at Susa is it not possible that lustre-painting was produced in Iran from early Islamic times onwards without a break until the advent of the Seljuqs, when it reached its golden age.
  UNDERGLAZE-PAINTED WARE (Pls.
104-105) Painting decoration under a clear glaze was first attempted by Muslim potters in Syria, probably during the late 9th or in the 10th century CE Underglaze-painted decoration became really possible during the Seljuq period when the new white frit ware was introduced and on which the clear alkaline glaze could be easily applied.
Pigments will not run in the kiln under alkaline glaze, thus elaborate decorations became possible.
This medium and technique was far more suitable for underglaze decoration than the glazes previously used in the same manner on the earlier lead glazed wares.
  The colours used in underglaze-painting were limited to three: cobalt blue, turquoise and black.
These colours were applied either all together, or sometimes only two; then the vessel was coated with a clear glaze.
Another type of underglaze-painted ware included the use of glaze of blue or turquoise colour in place of the transparent glaze.
In this instance the decoration was usually painted in one colour only, namely in black.
There are, however, a few examples known on which the decoration appears in black and cobalt blue under a greenish glaze.
  The decoration of most of these underglaze-painted vessels utilizes floral designs and epigraphic patterns.
Others show human figures or animals.
Those with human figures and animals reveal a close relationship with contemporary lustre-painted pottery.
The details of the figures are identical to those on lustre wares; their garments are likewise ornate.
On a few examples the pond ornament is present in the foreground.
That would imply that perhaps the artists of these lustre and underglaze-painted vessels were the same and both types of wares were produced by the same ateliers.
But where were these workshops and when were these vessels mostly made?   Scholars in the past generally accepted Ray and Kashan as the main centres for this type of pottery.
Indeed, there can be no question about Kashan as a centre.
As for Ray, the same remarks apply as for lustre-painting; there is still not sufficient evidence to claim that this type of pottery was made there.
Evidence was likewise missing in Nishapur.
It was again at Jorjan that the recent excavations brought to light kiln-wasters, and tripods indicating that underglaze-painting was practiced there, in the same kilns where lustre wares were made.
The underglaze-painted finds, complete and sherds, are so numerous in Jorjan that local manufacture cannot be doubted any longer, particularly on account of the evidence of wasters.
  For the possible dates of these underglaze-painted wares, there are a number of dated examples; the earliest known dated example is a jug, with the date 557 A.
H.
/1166 CE, and the latest dates from the period after the Mongol invasion, to the year of 677 A.
H.
/ 1278 CE         OVERGLAZE-PAINTED (MINAI AND LAJVARDINA) WARES (PI.
106) Probably one of the most beautiful types of pottery that was produced during the Seljuq period is that of overglaze-painting.
In Persian the names of minai (enamel), or heft-rengi, (seven colours) are used.
The term lajvardina applies to a somewhat later technique and will be described further below.
  It seemed logical for Seljuq potters to attempt, after their numerous successful techniques, the most difficult decoration, namely painting in polychrome over the glaze.
The colours used were indeed seven, as the Persian term, heft-rengi indicates: cobalt blue, green or turquoise, red, brown or black, gold, yellow and white.
The seven colours do not necessarily appear all together on every overglazepainted vessel.
It is claimed in fact that two colours out of these seven, namely cobalt blue and turquoise, are not painted over, but under the glaze.
  The decoration of this overglaze-painted ware, particularly of the earlier pieces is very delicately painted in miniature style, and indeed recalls contemporary Persian and Mesopotamian manuscript illumination.
Unfortunately there are not many illuminated manuscripts which have survived from the Seljuq period, but there is one in the Topkapi Saray Library in Istanbul, the manuscript of Varqa va Gulshah, which is- definitely a Persian Seljuq work and was most likely executed in Khurasan.
The similarity between the miniatures of this particular manuscript and the decorations of the minai vessels is so striking that several scholars put forward the idea that the artists of the miniatures and the pottery vessels must have been the very same persons.
It is here, on minai vessels that we have the only Islamic and Iranian pottery which displays elaborate hunting, royal or love secenes, most of which must recall the stories from Ferdausi's Shahnameh.
The story of Bahram Gur and Azadeh hunting is a scene that is repeated on several minai vessels.
There is also a large plate in the Freer Gallery in Washington representing the siege of a fortress.
It has been explained that this scene is neither from the Shahnameh, nor from any other Persian epic, but rather recalls an actual event, a real siege that must have taken place at some time and was later remembered, perhaps as a souvenir for someone depicted on this minai plate.
  When we examine the development of minai wares in detail, we may come to the conclusion that in its first stage the decorations over the glaze were somewhat limited and included only floral designs and geometrical patterns.
The Jorjan excavations produced numbers of such sherds but no figural decorations.
Figural decorations must represent the second stage in the development of minai.
We have a few such dated examples, the earliest one being a bowl, dated 578 A.
H.
/1182 A.
D.
, and the latest known piece 621 A.
H.
/1242 CE Abu'l-Qasem, who was a member of the famous Kashan lustre potter family, in his treatise on pottery techniques (already referred to previously) claimed that by his time in 700 A.
H.
/1300 CE, minai had died out and was not practised any longer.
By then the lajvardina technique was used.
  The change from minai to lajvardina, however was not a straight jump, but was rather a slow transitional process.
From the surviving complete vessels and sherds it appears that at a later date, most likely after the Mongol invasion, the minai technique was simplified.
The vessels were covered with a coloured, usually light blue or turquoise glaze and the decoration, which by then was very much simplified and restricted to scrollwork and geometrical designs, was painted in red, black, occasionally in white and with the larger part of the decoration executed in gold leaf stuck to the glazed surface.
Some of the decorative details were in low relief.
Jars, jugs, bowls, or some unusual objects like the cosmetic or chemical container (plate 99) were made in this transitional technique.
  Towards the end of the 13th century the background of these overglaze-painted vessels becomes darker; they were completely covered with lajvard (hence the name) or cobalt blue glaze, then were painted in the same way and with the same colours as mentioned above for the transitional pieces.
  Ray, Kashan, Saveh and even Natanz were suggested as the possible centres of minai and lajvardina wares.
The Ray excavations in the thirties failed to produce any minai piece, and the excavator, the late Dr.
Schmidt remarked that they must have been imported there.
The recent archaeological work at Ray failed to produce a single minai piece.
Saveh and Natanz, in the absence of any achaeological evidence, must be treated with the same caution as for the lustre-painted wares.
There is, however, no doubt about Kashan being one of the.
most important centres of the technique which was stated by Abu'l-Qasem,as mentioned above.
  The excavations at Jorjan produced a large number of minai sherds, all from the potters' area.
It is true that up to this date, not a single waster was discovered, but the presence of so many minai sherds around the kilns may be an indication of local production.
  As for the production of lajvardina, Abu'I-Qasem clearly mentions that this was made at Kashan during his life-time, i.
e.
towards the end to the 13th and beginning of the 14th century.
Ettinghausen once put forward the suggestion that perhaps they were made in the Soltanabad (present day Arak) area.
The German excavations at Takht-i Sulayman, in the northwestern part of the country have also produced lajvardina wares, mainly tiles which must have decorated the palace of the 11-Khanid Abaqa Khan.
The excavators have also discovered kilns and kiln-wasters there.
Accordingly the technique must have been practised at least in two different places, namely in Kashan and in Takht-i Sulayman, but that was already in post-Mongol times under the II-Khanid rulers.
    UNGLAZED WARES (Pis.
107-108) Unglazed wares are one of the most common and popular pottery types, made almost everywhere and throughout several millennia.
In Islamic pottery they constitute a great part of the evidence in the history and evolution of ceramics.
To date or identify the provenance of unglazed wares is an extremely difficult, mostly impossible task.
Yet, it was during the Seljuq period that more and finer unglazed wares were produced all over in Iran than ever before or even after.
  The paste of these vessels can be white, buff, yellow or red.
The actual colour of the body depends partly on the chemical composition of the clay, and partly on firing.
The wares may be divided into two large groups: simple or undecorated vessels, and decorated ones.
The decorations may be incised, stamped, moulded, carved or pierced.
Frequently several of these decorative techniques were applied on the same vessels.
  There are large storage jars, decorated and undecorated, bowls, jugs, and bottles, particularly convenient for holding water, since evaporation of water from the unglazed surface helps to cool the liquid inside.
Pilgrim flasks, cups, etc.
were also made in these unglazed wares.
Kilns for producing such wares were discovered in several sites in the country, but it was in Nishapur and Jorjan that moulds came to light.
It is nevertheless most likely that almost every region had its pottery centre where unglazed wares were made for local production.
      IL-KHANID PERIOD (1258-1334 CE) The Mongol invasions of 1220 and 1221 CE devastated large parts of Iran and in particular destroyed cities like Ray, Nishapur and Jorjan, which previously were the most important pottery centres.
Kashan, although likewise destroyed by the Mongols, seemed to have quickly recovered and pottery production continued.
  The Mongol governors, the II-Khans, who ruled the country on behalf of the Great Khan in Mongolia, soon separated themselves from the rest of the Empire and set up an independent dynasty.
Their new capital was first at Maragheh and later at Tabriz in northwest Iran.
They embraced Islam and assumed Iranian customs and culture.
However, recovery from the great devastation was rather slow.
It was not until the end of the 13th century that new building projects were started.
Rashid al-Din, the prime minister of the Mongol 11-Khans at the beginning of the 14th century, and also a scholar, was responsible among other cultural activities for the compilation of the famous Jami' al-Tawarikh "Universal History"" manuscript which was richly illustrated with miniature paintings.
  As far as known today, it was mainly Kashan that continued manufacturing lustre, underglaze and overglaze-painted wares, as has already been mentioned.
Towards the end of the 13th and beginning of the 14th century CE, however, new pottery centres emerged.
One of these was in the northwest, probably at Takht-i Sulayman, where the Mongol Abaqa Khan (1265-1281 CE) built a palace for himself which as we have already seen was decorated with luster and lajvardina tiles.
Takht-i Sulayman, however, must have been connected with another major pottery producing area, namely the Soltanabad district (modern Arak), which included not only the town itself, but at least another twenty or thirty villages.
Further south, Kerman became another centre and soon M ashhad pottery appears as well.
Apart from these main centres there were several other, less significant, pottery producing areas, most of which haven't yet been located.
  The pottery of the Il-Khanid period can be divided into the following groups ? The wares of Kashan ? Soltanabad and Takht-i Sulayman pottery ? The wares of Kerman ? Jorjan wares ? Provincial wares.
    THE WARES OF KASHAN Lustre and underglaze-painted wares continued in Kashan after the Mongol invasion with the same shapes, decoration and techniques identical to those used before.
In the early phase there is hardly any noticeable change.
There was an increase in the production of tiles, particularly for rebuilding or new architectural projects under 11-Khanid patronage.
These tiles were intended to decorate palaces and religious buildings such as mosques, madrasahs and shrines.
A great number of these tiles and mihrabs bear the signature of the artists and the date of completion.
The inscriptions on the tiles are partly in Arabic and partly in Persian; the later ones may be quotations from the Shahnameh or from other Persian epics.
  By the early 14th century CE some change is noticeable in the decoration of these Kashan vessels and tiles.
Namely, certain Far Eastern decorative elements such as phoenixes, dragons, etc.
are introduced.
On this new type of tile part of the decoration may appear in low relief and occasionally painted in cobalt blue, turquoise or both.
    WARES OF THE SOLTANABAD DISTRICT (Pls.
109-117) The Soltanabad (Arak) district must have been a significant pottery producing area well before the advent of the Mongols.
In early Islamic times, nevertheless, we don't know much about the pottery from this area.
It is only towards the end of the 13th and early 14th century that ceramics of this region become important.
In the past scholars have even attributed some lustre vessels to this district.
We can say, however, that these were more likely the products of Kashan than of this area.
Soltanabad wares may be divided into the following three groups: the first one is very similar to the underglazepainted wares of Kashan, except that here the design is mainly composed of radiating wedge-shaped designs with floral or epigraphic patterns.
These are painted in cobalt blue and black under a clear glaze.
The second type differs from this, since here the design is mainly in black on a greyish ground, some of the decorative patterns appearing in white low relief, and then covered with a clear glaze.
Usually there is a bird or an animal inside in the centre depicted over floral background; round the rim there is an inscription, which is usually illegible, serving only a decorative purpose.
By then the shape of the vessels also changes.
The most popular vessel is the bowl on a splayed foot-ring with hemispherical body and everted and incurved flat rim.
This type of bowl was also produced in a monochrome-glazed version, occasionally decorated with vertical ribs on the outside (pl.
110).
  The third type of these wares is much thinner and whiter.
The decorations are painted mostly in three colours: cobalt, black and turquoise, but black is primarily used for outlining the decorative patterns.
This was essential since by then potters somehow once again were unable to control the colours, which ran in the kiln (see pls.
114-117).
  Another new shape introduced at that time was the albarello.
This shape may have come from the west, probably from Syria.
Some scholars believed that there was a connection between certain Soltanabad wares and Syrian pottery of the time.
Certainly some affinity is recognisable, not only in the shape of vessels, like the albarello, but also in the decorative motifs.
  These Soltanabad wares may have also been produced elsewhere in the country, primarily in the northwestern part of Iran.
Here one should once more refer to Takht-i Sulayman, where similar vessels have been excavated.
The presence of kilns and wasters indicate their local production.
      THE WARES OF KERMAN Recent archaeological work in the Kerman region, namely at Ghubayra and in Sirjan, brought to light new types of wares which seem to be of local provenance.
These included underglaze-painted wares.
Their decoration may imitate those of Kashan, or later the wares of Soltanabad, but their quality and potting is remarkably different.
These Kerman wares are heavily potted; the glaze is of an inferior quality, which easily peels off from the body.
There were no kilns or wasters discovered at Ghubayra, but they were found at Sirjan.
Accordingly, Sirjan, a considerable town at that time, was already, or had just become a pottery producing centre.
  Another type of local ware, definitely the product of either the town of Kerman or another place in the province, was lustre-painted tiles.
This type is so different in paste, quality of the glaze and pigment from the tiles of Kashan that it can be easily recognised.
The decoration may imitate the tiles of Kashan, yet is inferior and the colour of the pigment is much darker brown.
During the Ghubayra excavations another type of lustre-painted tile was discovered: painted on cobalt blue glaze with lustre decoration, which on the dark glaze appears silverish in colour.
While such vessels were made elsewhere in Iran, no such tiles have been located so far anywhere else.
      JORJAN WARES The recent excavations by the Iranian Centre for Archaeological Research at Jorjan have shown that the town was, as stated by several scholars before, destroyed by the Mongols.
Still, it now seems almost certain that pottery production continued there after a short interval.
The post-Mongol pottery included underglaze and lustre-painted wares.
Their quality had not deteriorated, but there were some changes in the decorative scheme, which became somewhat simplified and perhaps less figurative.
  Some wasters recently discovered at Jorjan were of the underglaze-painted wares, their shapes similar to those of Soltanabad bowls, i.
e.
with everted and incurved rims, and with inscriptions outside round the rim.
  There is also an indication that some kind of blue and white ware was produced in the Jorjan area.
These pieces may in fact represent the first examples of Persian blue and white wares.
Simply, it is a category within the underglaze-painted type in which the black and turquoise colours have been eliminated.
These early blue and white examples may date from the 14th century, prior to the invasion of Timur in 1393 CE when he destroyed Jorjan and which meant the end of urban life there.
      PROVINCIAL WARES (PIS.
118-120) Apart from the wares and pottery centres mentioned, there are a great number of wares, the provenance of which cannot be easily localised.
Two possible provincial centres were identified as Varamin and the Ray area.
The pottery from these two areas has a buff body, covered with white or creamy ground slip and painted in polychrome under a yellowish transparent glaze.
The decoration of these vessels may be simply floral, scrollwork, or sometimes depicting flying birds.
These birds recall Far Eastern prototypes.
The attribution to the Varamin and Ray vicinity was due partly to finds collected and partly to historical events; the area became important under the Il-Khanids at the beginning of the 14th century.
  There is also a great number of heavily potted, blue and black painted wares, decorated with crosshatching.
These vessels, mostly large bowls and dishes, have everted flat rims and are always heavily potted.
Up to this day it is impossible to determine the provenance of these "crosshatched" wares.
    TIMURID POTTERY (1370-1502 CE) In 1393 CE there was another devastating invasion in Iran.
This time it was Timur_who came with a big army, conquered the entire country and destroyed many cities, such as Jorjan, Isfahan, Shiraz and Kerman.
Timur carried most of the artists away with him to his capital at Samarkand.
Thus Samarkand became the centre of the arts, particularly of architecture and architectural decoration.
The golden age of Timurid art, however, did not start until the reign of Shah Rukh (1404-1447 CE).
Shah Rukh, himself a calligrapher, became a patron of the arts.
Miniature painting flourished; beautiful religious building were erected all over the Timurid realm.
: Architectural decoration becomes important at which time the most beautiful and elaborate faience mosaic decoration was made.
It is perhaps sufficient to mention the shrine complex, the Shah-i Zindeh in Samarkand, or the Gur-i Amir, Timur's mausoleum, the Madrasah of Gauhar Shah in Herat and Mashhad, or perhaps the most famous and best known, the so-called "Blue Mosque" in Tabriz.
  Pottery production of the period hasn't been fully investigated, yet it appears that the same type of pottery was produced all over, as before under the Mongols.
There is perhaps one more important ware that now appears: the first group of the so-called "Kubachi" ware.
This ware was simply painted in black under blue or turquoise glaze, and consisted only of large dishes with everted sloping rims.
The decoration consisted mainly of floral designs or geometrical forms.
There are, however, two examples which have inscriptions in Nasta`liq which include the date of the vessels.
Both give 15th century CE dates, thus they were definitely Timurid.
The name "Kubachi" in fact is very unsatisfactory, since that is the name of a small village in Daghestan in the Caucasus.
But it was there in Kubachi, where this type of pottery was first discovered and found on the walls of peasant houses.
It is now wellknown that the people of Kubachi never made the pottery, but they produced fine metalwork and arms which seemed to have been exchanged for this particular type of pottery.
It is now widely accepted that "Kubachi" pottery in fact was produced in the northwestern part of Iran, in Tabriz, or somewhere in that region.
  Another type of pottery that now becomes more fashionable is the blue and white ware.
It has already been mentioned above under Jorjan that some kind of blue and white ware was already produced in pre-Timurid times either in Jorjan or somewhere else in the Jorjan plain.
The new type of blue and white, however, is different from the former in shape, colour and decoration.
This new type of blue and white was certainly produced under the direct influence of imported Chinese blue and white porcelain.
The shapes are those of Chinese porcelain vessels, mainly small "rice" bowls.
The decoration again recalls those of Chinese prototypes, depicting lotuses, meanders and flying phoenixes.
It had been suggested that this 15th century blue and white was made in Kerman.
This theory has now been substantiated by archaeological evidence from Ghubayra and from other sites in Kerman Province.
It is perhaps also worthwhile to mention that such blue and white bowls were excavated in East Africa at Kilwa, which must have been imported from Iran.
    LATER ISLAMIC PERIOD (16TH-19TH CENTURIES CE) Lane included the late Il-Khanid and Timurid periods in this later Islamic pottery.
Dr.
Geza Fehervari also recently included these two periods under the later period in his study based on the Barlow Collection.
In the present writer's opinion late 11-Khanid pottery was more or less a continuation of Seljuq types, although admittedly some changes took place around the end of the 13th century, as has been pointed out.
These changes are attributable to Mongol influence.
During the Timurid period, a transition between earlier and later types, there was a decline in pottery making.
This was contrasted by the great advance and brilliance of technique achieved in architectural decoration.
    SAFAVID WARES (1502-1722 CE) The Safavid period was a renaissance in the history of Iranian pottery, when not only long forgotten techniques were re-introduced, but also when new wares were invented.
Thus perhaps it is more logical to consider the rise of the Safavid dynasty as the beginning of a new epoch in the long history of Islamic pottery.
  The Safavids came to power at the beginning of the 16th century CE, and for the first time after more than one thousand years a national dynasty, the Safavids, came to power in Iran.
The dynasty was founded by Shah Ismail (1502-1524 CE) who united the country under his rule.
The Safavid period was a golden age for Iran, particularly for the arts.
Monumental and richly decorated mosques, madrasahs and palaces were built: metalwork flourished again; carpet weaving gained new impetus and miniature painting reached its apogee during this time.
Shah Ismail's successors, Shah Tahmasp 1 (1524-1576 CE), Shah Abbas 1 (1587-1628 CE) became active patrons of the arts.
First the capital was at Tabriz, and later, due to the Ottoman threat, was transfered to Qazvin; at the end of the 16th century it was moved to Isfahan by Shah Abbas 1.
  Pottery manufacture gained new impetus, partly under Ottoman and European, and partly under Chinese influence.
Old techniques were revived and produced, due to the different age and requirements, in a new guise.
The body of these Safavid wares is now so fine, thin and translucent, that it comes very close to the imported Chinese porcelain.
It is a kind of faience but much more refined than that of the Seljuq period.
  Safavid pottery can be divided into the following types ? Kubachi wares ? Lustre wares ? White or "Gombroon" wares ? Late blue and white wares and ? Monochrome and polychrome wares of Kerman.
     KUBACHI WARES This type of ware has already been mentioned briefly under Timurid wares.
The most recent research produced evidence that this ware can be subdivided into three groups; the first group is discussed above.
The second group is the blue and white.
As in the earlier group there are only large dishes known, very similar in shape to those of group no.
1.
The blue of this ware is rather inky and is apt to run under the glaze.
While there was definitely some Chinese influence here, the decorations depicted on these wares are rather distant from Chinese prototypes.
As for their possible dates, the 16th century has been suggested.
  The third, and perhaps the most important group, of these Kubachi wares is the polychromepainted.
The designs appear in blue, brownish-red, yellow and green under clear glaze.
In the decoration some Ottoman influence, i.
e.
the influence of Iznik wares is apparent, as is Chinese influence.
Portraits of ladies and gentlemen are painted on these dishes against floral or simple scroll backgrounds.
Others depict landscapes or just flowers.
Apart from large dishes, small bowls, dishes and jugs are also known in these types.
      LUSTRE WARES As has been mentioned lustre-painted ware was still produced in Kashan and Jorjan and, tiles in Kerman during the 14th and even in the 15th century CE During the 15th century, however, there was a decline in lustre production It, nevertheless, never stopped completely but continued until it was revived again on a wide scale in Safavid times.
Safavid lustre ware has a very hard and compact white body and was decorated in golden, brownish or reddish colours.
The decorations are mainly floral designs and scrollwork; birds or small animals are also rarely depicted.
These were painted on a white ground, or sometimes over cobalt blue glaze.
  The shape of the vessels changed considerably; bottles, vases, cups, and plates are the most important types.
Great numbers of these are preserved in western public and private collections.
The centre of Safavid lustre production, due to lack of archaeological evidence for local production, has still not been established for certain.
Kashan, Shiraz, Isfahan and Kerman were all suggested, but until recently no fragments or vessels had been discovered in archaeological context at any of these places.
Safavid lustre wares can be dated to the late 16th to the early 18th century CE       WHITE (GOMBROON) WARES The term "Gombroon" derives from the old name of modern Bander Abbas, which in Safavid times was an important port on the Persian Gulf.
It was from there that the Dutch and the British East India Companies exported this special type of pottery, together with other Safavid wares to Europe.
  The "Gombroon" ware has a hard faience body, which is considerably thinner than that of contemporary lustre ware.
It is occasionally even translucent.
The decoration may consist of incised patterns under clear glaze, or is painted in cobalt blue and black colours.
Finer pieces are pierced, and just as in the white wares of the Seljuq period, the little holes are filled by the glaze, which has a greenish tinge.
Others have no decoration; their beauty is in their fine and elegant shapes and in the almost porcelainous body.
  Bowls, mostly on half splayed foot-rings ewers, jugs and cups were made.
This type of pottery was introduced sometime during the 17th century and continued right up to the end of the 19th.
There are two dated examples known.
Both are bowls in the British Museum, one dated to 1233 A.
H.
(1817 CE), and the other to 1234 A.
H.
(1818 CE), both with the signature of Mohammad Ali.
    LATE BLUE AND WHITE (PI.
121) Reference has already been made to the introduction of blue and white wares in previous chapters.
It was nevertheless during the Safavid period that this ware gained greater importance in Persian pottery manufacture.
European travellers of the time refer to the production of this type of pottery, which was, as has been mentioned above, exported to Europe.
  The earliest blue and white ware was most likely manufactured in Jorjan or somewhere else in that area, as mentioned earlier.
Kerman was another important centre as early as the 15th century.
During the Safavid period blue and white production increased there and such wares were exported not only to Europe but also to East Africa.
European literary sources mention three major centres for blue and white wares: Kerman, Mashhad and Yazd.
  The wares of Kerman may be recognized by the paste of the vessels, which is softer and porous, and by their decoration, very distinct from the works of the other two centres.
Kerman blue and white may imitate the decoration of Chinese wares, but the interpretation of the Chinese decorative motifs, landscapes and figures is clearly Persian.
The floral motifs in or around the landscapes is also entirely Persian.
The blue is softer and the decoration was never outlined in black, as it happens in Mashhad or in Yazd towards the end of the Safavid period.
  The decoration of the blue and white ware of Mashhad consists of much closer imitations of the Chinese prototypes.
The body is harder, the blue is darker and the decoration is a faithful copy of the Chinese blue and white porcelain.
The large plates and dishes, which have survived in large numbers in private and public collections in the western hemisphere, always depict a Chinese landscape in the centre of the vessel, while on the border are Buddhist symbols, Chinese flowers or rocks are shown.
On a few specimens the decoration is reserved in white on a blue background and moulded in low relief.
Towards the late 17th and early 18th century, when potters were again unable to control the flow of pigment in the kiln, the decorations were outlined in black.
  The late Arthur Lane was the first to emphasize the importance of Yazd as a blue and white producing centre.
He referred to tassel-marks on the base of the vessels which were characteristic of Yazd.
Recently more vessels have come to light which can be attributed to this town.
The colour of Yazd wares is strikingly different from those of Kerman and Mashhad.
It is rather on the darker side, a kind of greyish-blue or almost black.
The glaze usually has a greenish tinge which never occurs on Kerman and Mashhad wares.
  There are a number of dated blue and white wares, and it is now clear that they were produced in all three centres throughout the Safavid period and even later.
    MONOCHROME WARES A large number of brown, yellow, green and blue glazed vessels are known to have been made during the Safavid period.
While their exact provenance has not yet been established, scholars have indicated that they can be connected with southern Iran, or more precisely, with the town of Kerman.
These wares may be simple, lacking any surface decoration; others are moulded, depicting human figures, flowers, animals or birds.
Jars, vases and flasks are known to have been made.
Their suggested date is the 17th and early 18th century.
     POLYCHROME WARES A group of pottery vessels were painted in brownish-red, blue and green under the glaze, likewise attributed to Kerman.
Such fragments actually have been collected recently on the slopes of the Qala'-i Dukhtar in Kerman and were excavated at Ghubayra.
Complete vessels preserved in private and public collections are mainly large plates and qalians, and are are decorated with flowers and human figures.
There are two dated examples, one bearing the date corresponding to 1673 CE and another 1677 CE Accordingly, these polychrome wares can be attributed to the 17th and early 18th centuries.
    WARES OF THE ZAND AND QAJAR PERIODS (1756-1925 CE) Post-Safavid pottery so far has not been seriously studied, and the available information is scarce and not very reliable.
Yet we may presume that after the Afghan invasion when the Safavid dynasty was swept away, for a while there was chaos in the country, but pottery production must have continued along the same lines as previously.
The change, or rather the decline, was gradual.
It is true that even as late as the middle of the 19th century fine blue and white or white "Gombroon" wares were produced, but in general the quality of pottery deteriorated.
With the removal of the capital from Isfahan, first to Shiraz under the Zands, and then to Tehran under the Qajars, the artists themselves moved.
Traces of Zand architectural decoration are visible in the Majid-i No and in other buildings in Shiraz.
New colours were introduced, including pale pink.
Later, tile production continued in Tehran.
These tiles depict human figures in low relief against a dark blue back ground.
  Isfahan produced a kind of blue and white ware and an underglaze polychrome-painted ware throughout the 19th century, but the quality of these never reached that of Safavid pottery.
A new type of pottery painted in blue and black with pierced decoration, again the clear glaze filling the small windows, was made in Nayin during the 19th century.
  Toward the end of the century there was a general decline in pottery manufacture in the country, due mainly to the mass imported and cheaply produced industrial porcelain from Europe and the Far East.
This meant the end of artistic pottery production in Iran and it was not revived until recent years.

Payment & Shipping

Payment

Accepted forms of payment: COD (cash on delivery), MasterCard, Personal Check, Visa, Wire Transfer

Shipping

Collection of Purchases - Storage fees
Purchases can only be collected after payment infull in cleared funds has been made to Osenat.
Purchased lots will become available only afterpayment infull has been made.
Storage fees will be charged by Osenat to purchasers who have not collected their items within 15 days from the sale as follows :
- 10€ per day for furniture
- 5€ per day for object or paintings

Export
Buyers should always check whether an export licence
is required before exporting. It is the buyer's sole
responsibility to obtain any relevant export or import
licence. The denial of any licence or any delay in obtaining licences shall neither justify the rescission of any sale nor any delay in making full payment for the lot. Osenat can advise buyers on the detailed provisions of the export licensing regulations and will submitt any necessary export licence applications on request.
However, Osenat cannot ensure that a licence will be obtained. Local laws may prohibit of some property and/or may prohibit the resale of some property in the country of importation. As an illustration only, we set out below a selection of the categories of works or art, together with the value thresholds above for which a French «certificat pour un bien culturel» (also known as «passport») may be required so that the lot can leave the French territory; the thresholds indicated in brakets is the one required for an export licence application outside the EU, when the latter differs from the national threshold.
- Pictures entirely made by hand on any support and of any material, of more than 50 years of age euros 150,000
- Furniture and objects, carpets, tapestries, clocks of more than 50 years of age euros 50,000
- Watercolours, gouaches and pastels of more than 50 years of age euros 30,000
- Original sculptures and copies of more than 50 years of age euros 50,000
- Books of more than 100 years of age
euros 50,000
- Vehicules of more than 75 years of age
euros 50,000
- Drawings of more than 50 years of age
euros 15,000
- Prints, lithographs and posters of more than 50 years of age

euros 15,000
- Photographs, films and negatives of more than 50 years of age
euros 15,000
- Printed maps of more than 100 years of age
euros 15,000
- Incunabula and manuscripts (EU whatever the value is)
euros 1,500
- Archaeology pieces of more than 100 years of age, originating directly from excavations (1)
- Archaeology pieces of more than 100 years of age, not originating directly from excavations euros 1,500
- Parts of Historical, Religious or Architectural monuments of more than 100 years of age (1)
- Archives of more than 50 years of age (EU whatever the value is) euros 300
(1) Application for licence for these categories is subject to the nature of the item.

Auction Details

Rugs Carpets & Persian Ceramics: Monsieur I.S.'s Collection

by
Osenat
October 27, 2012, 02:30 PM CET

Hôtel des ventes de Fontainebleau 9-11, rue Royale, Fontainebleau, Seine-et-Marne, 77300, FR

Terms

Buyer's Premium

26.0%

Bidding Increments

From:To:Increment:
€0€99€10
€100€399€20
€400€999€50
€1,000€1,999€100
€2,000€4,999€200
€5,000€9,999€500
€10,000€19,999€500
€20,000€49,999€1,000
€50,000€99,999€2,000
€100,000+€5,000

General terms and conditions of sale

General terms and conditions of sale

CONDITIONS AND INFORMATION PRINCIPALLY
FOR BUYERS

All property is being offered under French Law and the conditions printed in this volume. lt is important that you read the following pages carefully.
The following pages give you as well useful information on how to buy at auction. Our staff is at your disposal to assist you.

BUYER'S PREMIUM
The purchase price will be the sum of the final bid plus a buyer's premium of 23 % ex. taxes (27,51 % inc. taxes - book: 24,61 inc. taxes).

Live Auction : an additional buyer's premium of 3% ex. taxes (3,59 inc. taxes) will be charged by Osenat to this buyer's premium
VAT RULES
Non-European buyers may have all VAT invoiced refunded to them if they request so in writing to the accounting department within delay of 3 months of the date of sale, and if they provide with the third sample of the customs documentation (DAU) stamped by customs. must appear as shipper on the export document and the buyer as the consignee. The exportation has to be done within the legal delays and a maximum of 3 months of the date of sale.

1 - BEFORE THE AUCTION

Pre-sale estimates
The pre-sale estimate are intended as a guide for prospective buyers. Any bid between the high and the low pre-sale estimates offers a fair chance of success.
lt is always advisable to consult us nearer the time of sales as estimates can be subject to revision.

Condition of Iots
Solely as a convenance, we may provide condition reports. All the property is sold in the condition in which they were offered for sale with all their imperfections and defects.
No claim can be accepted for minor restoration or small damages.
lt is the responsability of the prospective bidders to inspect each lot prior to the sale and to satisfy themselves that each lot corresponds with its description. Given that the re-lining, frames and finings constitute protective measures and not defects, they will not be noted. Any measurements provided are only approximate.
All prospective buyers shall have the opportunity to inspect each object for sale during the presale exhibition in order to satisfy themselves as to characteristics, size as well as any necessary repairs or restoration.

Sale preview
Pre-auctions viewings are open to the public free of charge. is concerned for your safety while on our premises and we endeavour to display items safely so far as is reasonably practicable, Nevertheless, should you handle any items on view at our premises, you do so at you own risk.

2 - BIDDING IN THE SALE
Bids may be executed in person by paddle during the auction or by telephone, or by third person who will transmit the orders in writing or by telephone prior to the sale. The auctions will be conducted in euros. A currency converter wili be operated in the salesroom for your convenience but, as errors may occur, you should not rely upon it as substituts for bidding in euros.

Bidding in Person
To bid in person at the auction, you will need to register for and collect a numbered paddle before the auction begins. Proof of identity will be required.
If you wish to bid on a lot, please indicate clearly that you are bidding by raising you paddle and attracting the attention of the auctioneer. Should you be the successful buyers of any lot, please ensure that the auctioneer can see your paddle and that it is your number that is called out.
Should there be any doubts as to price or buyer, please draw the auctioneer's attention to it immediately.
We will invoice all lots sold to the name and address in which the paddle has been registered and invoices cannot be transferred to other names and addresses.
In the event of loss of your paddle, please inform the sales clerk immediately.

At the end of the sale, please return your paddle to the registration desk.

Bidding as principal
If you make a bid at auction, you do as principal and we may held you personally and solely liable for that bid unless it has been previously agreed that you do so on behalf of an identified and acceptable third party and you have produced a valid power of attorney acceptable to us.

Absentee bids
If you cannot attend the auction, we will pleased to execute written bids on your behalf. A bidding form can be found at the back of this catalogue. This service is free and confidential.
Lots will be bought as cheaply as is consistent with other bide and the reserves. In the event of identical bids, the earliest bid received will take precedence. Always indicate a top limit
- the hammer price to which you would stop bidding if you were attending the auction yourself
Buy and unlimited bids will not be accepted.
Orders shall be made in euro.

Written orders may be
- sent by e-mail at [email protected]
- sent by fax to the following number: 00 33 (0) 1 80 81 90 01
- hand delivered to staff on the premises
- sent by post to the offices of.
You may also bid by telephone. Telephone bids must be confirmed before the auction by letter, fax or e-mail. These as well as written bids must be received 24 hours before the auction so that we can guarantee satisfaction.

Bidding by telephone
If you cannot attend the auction, it is possible to bid on the telephone. As the number of telephone lines is limited, it is necessary to make arrangements for this service 24 hours before the sale.
We also suggest that you leave a covering bid which we can execute on your behalf in the event we are unable to reach you by telephone. Osenat Fontainebleau staff are available to execute bids for you in English.

3 - AT THE Auction
Conditions of sale
As indicated above, the auction is governed by the conditions printed in this catalogue. Anyone considering bidding in the auction should read them carefully. They may be amended by way of notices posted in the salesroom or by way of announcement made by the auctioneer.

Access to the lots during the sale
For security reasons, prospective bidders will not be able to view the lots whilst the auction is taking place.

Auctioning
The auctioneer may commence and advance the bidding at levels he considers appropriate and is entitled to place consecutive and responsive bids on behalf of the vendor until the reserve price is achieved.

4 - AFTER THE AUCTiON
Results
If you would like to know the result of any absentee bids which you may have instructed us to place on your behalf, please contact:
- Tél. 00 33 (0)1 64 22 27 62
Fax 00 33 (0)1 64 22 38 94
or: www.osenat.com

Payment
Payment is due immediatly after the sale and may be made by the following method:
- checks in euro
- cash within the following limits:
- 3.000 euros for trade clients
- 3.000 euros for French private clients
- 15.000 euros for foreign tax nationals (non trade)
- credit cards VISA and MASTERCARD
- Bank transfers should be made to:
HSBC FRANCE
Account holder:

Conditions

All property is being offered under French Law and the conditions printed in this volume. lt is important that you read the following pages carefully.
The following pages give you as well useful information on how to buy at auction. Our staff is at your disposal to assist you.

BUYER'S PREMIUM
The purchase price will be the sum of the final bid plus a buyer's premium of 23 % ex. taxes (27,51 % inc. taxes - book: 24,61 inc. taxes).

Live Auction : an additional buyer's premium of 3% ex. taxes (3,59 inc. taxes) will be charged by Osenat to this buyer's premium

Bids may be executed in person by paddle during the auction or by telephone, or by third person who will transmit the orders in writing or by telephone prior to the sale. The auctions will be conducted in euros. A currency converter wili be operated in the salesroom for your convenience but, as errors may occur, you should not rely upon it as substituts for bidding in euros.

Bidding in Person
To bid in person at the auction, you will need to register for and collect a numbered paddle before the auction begins. Proof of identity will be required.
If you wish to bid on a lot, please indicate clearly that you are bidding by raising you paddle and attracting the attention of the auctioneer. Should you be the successful buyers of any lot, please ensure that the auctioneer can see your paddle and that it is your number that is called out.
Should there be any doubts as to price or buyer, please draw the auctioneer's attention to it immediately.
We will invoice all lots sold to the name and address in which the paddle has been registered and invoices cannot be transferred to other names and addresses.
In the event of loss of your paddle, please inform the sales clerk immediately.

At the end of the sale, please return your paddle to the registration desk.


If you make a bid at auction, you do as principal and we may held you personally and solely liable for that bid unless it has been previously agreed that you do so on behalf of an identified and acceptable third party and you have produced a valid power of attorney acceptable to us.


Conditions of sale
As indicated above, the auction is governed by the conditions printed in this catalogue. Anyone considering bidding in the auction should read them carefully. They may be amended by way of notices posted in the salesroom or by way of announcement made by the auctioneer.

Access to the lots during the sale
For security reasons, prospective bidders will not be able to view the lots whilst the auction is taking place.

Auctioning
The auctioneer may commence and advance the bidding at levels he considers appropriate and is entitled to place consecutive and responsive bids on behalf of the vendor until the reserve price is achieved.

Payment

Payment is due immediatly after the sale and may be made by the following method:
- checks in euro
- cash within the following limits:
- 3.000 euros for trade clients
- 3.000 euros for French private clients
- 15.000 euros for foreign tax nationals (non trade)
- credit cards VISA and MASTERCARD
- Bank transfers should be made to:
HSBC FRANCE
Account holder:
5, RUE ROYALE
7730O FONTAINEBLEAU
Domiciliation: HSBC FR PARIS AUBER
Code banque: 30056
Code guichet: 00811
No compte: 08110133135
Clé RIB: 57
International identification:
FR76 3005 6008 1108 1101 3313 557
SWIFT: CCFRFRPP
Siret: 44261438400018
APE 741A0
No TVA intracommunautaire: FR 76442614384

Collection and export of Purchases

Collection of Purchases - Storage fees
Purchases can only be collected after payment infull in cleared funds has been made to Osenat.
Purchased lots will become available only afterpayment infull has been made.
Storage fees will be charged by Osenat to purchasers who have not collected their items within 15 days from the sale as follows :
- 10€ per day for furniture
- 5€ per day for object or paintings

Export
Buyers should always check whether an export licence
is required before exporting. It is the buyer's sole
responsibility to obtain any relevant export or import
licence. The denial of any licence or any delay in obtaining licences shall neither justify the rescission of any sale nor any delay in making full payment for the lot. Osenat can advise buyers on the detailed provisions of the export licensing regulations and will submitt any necessary export licence applications on request.
However, Osenat cannot ensure that a licence will be obtained. Local laws may prohibit of some property and/or may prohibit the resale of some property in the country of importation. As an illustration only, we set out below a selection of the categories of works or art, together with the value thresholds above for which a French «certificat pour un bien culturel» (also known as «passport») may be required so that the lot can leave the French territory; the thresholds indicated in brakets is the one required for an export licence application outside the EU, when the latter differs from the national threshold.
- Pictures entirely made by hand on any support and of any material, of more than 50 years of age euros 150,000
- Furniture and objects, carpets, tapestries, clocks of more than 50 years of age euros 50,000
- Watercolours, gouaches and pastels of more than 50 years of age euros 30,000
- Original sculptures and copies of more than 50 years of age euros 50,000
- Books of more than 100 years of age
euros 50,000
- Vehicules of more than 75 years of age
euros 50,000
- Drawings of more than 50 years of age
euros 15,000
- Prints, lithographs and posters of more than 50 years of age

euros 15,000
- Photographs, films and negatives of more than 50 years of age
euros 15,000
- Printed maps of more than 100 years of age
euros 15,000
- Incunabula and manuscripts (EU whatever the value is)
euros 1,500
- Archaeology pieces of more than 100 years of age, originating directly from excavations (1)
- Archaeology pieces of more than 100 years of age, not originating directly from excavations euros 1,500
- Parts of Historical, Religious or Architectural monuments of more than 100 years of age (1)
- Archives of more than 50 years of age (EU whatever the value is) euros 300
(1) Application for licence for these categories is subject to the nature of the item.

Buyer's premium

The purchase price will be the sum of the final bid plus a buyer's premium of 23 % ex. taxes (27,51 % inc. taxes - book: 24,61 inc. taxes).
Live Auction : an additional buyer's premium of 3% ex. taxes (3,59 inc. taxes) will be charged by Osenat to this buyer's premium

VAT

Non-European buyers may have all VAT invoiced refunded to them if they request so in writing to the accounting department within delay of 3 months of the date of sale, and if they provide with the third sample of the customs documentation (DAU) stamped by customs. must appear as shipper on the export document and the buyer as the consignee. The exportation has to be done within the legal delays and a maximum of 3 months of the date of sale.

Information

Pre-sale estimates
The pre-sale estimate are intended as a guide for prospective buyers. Any bid between the high and the low pre-sale estimates offers a fair chance of success.
lt is always advisable to consult us nearer the time of sales as estimates can be subject to revision.

Condition of Iots
Solely as a convenance, we may provide condition reports. All the property is sold in the condition in which they were offered for sale with all their imperfections and defects.
No claim can be accepted for minor restoration or small damages.
lt is the responsability of the prospective bidders to inspect each lot prior to the sale and to satisfy themselves that each lot corresponds with its description. Given that the re-lining, frames and finings constitute protective measures and not defects, they will not be noted. Any measurements provided are only approximate.
All prospective buyers shall have the opportunity to inspect each object for sale during the presale exhibition in order to satisfy themselves as to characteristics, size as well as any necessary repairs or restoration.

Sale preview
Pre-auctions viewings are open to the public free of charge. is concerned for your safety while on our premises and we endeavour to display items safely so far as is reasonably practicable, Nevertheless, should you handle any items on view at our premises, you do so at you own risk.


Preemption right
The French state retains a preemption right on certain works of art and archives which may be exercised during the auction.
In case of confirmation of the preemption right within fifteen (15) days from the date of the sale, the French state shall be subrogated in the buyers position.

Catalogue descriptions
shall exercise such due care when making express statements in catalogue descriptions, as amended by any notices posted in the salesroom prior to the opening of the auction or by announcement made by the auctioneer at the beginning of the auction and noted in the minutes of the sales, as is consistent with its role of an auction house and in the light of the information provided to it by vendor, of the scientific, technical and artistic knowledge, and the generally accepted opinions of relevant experts, at the time any such express statement is made.