Persian Painting on Silk depicting Courtiers in a Palace Scene, C19th/C20th
Current Bid: | £40.00 |
Bid Increment: | £2.00 |
Next Min Bid: | £42.00 |
Buyer’s Premium: | £9.60 |
Total Amount: | £49.60 |
Number of Bids: | 5 |
Location: | United Kingdom |
Highest Bidder: | User 1402 |
Auction Start: | 15/05/24 22:10:00 UTC |
Auction Ending: | 29/05/24 19:38:00 UTC |
Auction Finished : | 29/05/24 19:38:10 UTC |
Persian Painting on Silk depicting Courtiers in a Palace Scene, C19th/C20th
A finely detailed painting on silk depicting court figures in a palace scene with fountains to the front and a mountainous forest to the rear, the border with scrolling foliage. The work is typical of that produced by Persian artists and the scene bears a close resemblance (lacking the patient lying on the floor) to a work entitled ‘The Physicians Duel’ which depicts a scene from the Khamsa by Nizami Ghanjavi and is included in the British Museum collection.The ‘Khamsa’ (Quintet or Quinary) is the best known work of Nizami Ghanjavi (c1141 – 1209) considered the greatest romantic epic poet in Persian literature. It comprises five long narrative poems the first of which is ‘Makhzan-ol-Asrar’ (The Treasury or Storehouse of Mysteries) and contains an episode where two physicians agree to fight each other with poison: each would give the other a poison and the doctors would then attempt, by their skill, to provide an antidote. One doctor succeeds but the other has less luck and in the version of the scene mentioned above is depicted lying ill on the ground.
The Khamsa was a popular subject for lavish manuscripts illustrated with painted miniatures at the Persian and Mughal courts in later centuries. The British Museum picture mentioned above, for example, comes from a manuscript created for the Mughal Emperor Akbar in the 1590s. Scenes from these works were then copied or adapted in turn by Persian artists in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries which is what we have here. The quality of the execution remains high producing a highly decorative example of the best Persian work.
Size: | 73.5cm x 51cm |
Weight: | n/a |
Date: | C19th/C20th |
Condition: | Good condition generally, a few tears at the top and slight fraying to the edges (see images) |
Estimate: | £60 – 80 |