Arts of the Islamic World

Arts of the Islamic World

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 212. A KASHAN LUSTRE POTTERY VESSEL IN THE FORM OF A SEATED FEMALE RULER, PERSIA, 12TH/13TH CENTURY .

A KASHAN LUSTRE POTTERY VESSEL IN THE FORM OF A SEATED FEMALE RULER, PERSIA, 12TH/13TH CENTURY

Auction Closed

October 23, 04:16 PM GMT

Estimate

10,000 - 15,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

A KASHAN LUSTRE POTTERY VESSEL IN THE FORM OF A SEATED FEMALE RULER, PERSIA, 12TH/13TH CENTURY 


sculpted as seated, enthroned female figure wearing an elaborately designed coat with an inscriptive band, foliate details, roundels with figurines, decorated with a brown lustre over an opacified glaze, the face and hat designed with an open interior and spout with blue glaze, some repair and subsequent repainting


37 by 24 by 13cm.

Sold in these rooms, 21 April 1980, lot 155, and again 20 April 1983, lot 103.

Figurines represent a significant part of production at Kashan in the late Seljuq period. The subject matter of these figurines is very wide ranging including birds, monkeys, harpies and sphinxes. Human figures were also made, amongst them, musicians playing instruments, horsemen dressed in Turkish military costume, and mothers with child. A lustre figure of a seated turbanned man formerly of the Ades Family Collection (see Watson 1985, p.120, no.100) is in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (inv.no. LOAN:ADES.5). Two vessels in the form of a seated figure are in the al-Sabah collection (Watson 2004, pp.344-5, Cat.nos. N.14, N.15). A figurine of a mother and child was sold in these rooms 9 April 2008, lot 147.