المؤلف
Mirak Husayn (maker)
تاريخ النشر
1510
مكان النشر
Tabriz (made) -
الموضوع
Geometric Patterns
النوع
أخرى
اللغة
غير محدد
رقمي
نعم
مخطوط
لا
الأبعاد الفيزيائية
Height: 9cm, Width: 4.4cm
المكتبة
Victoria and Albert Museum
معرف أصل المكتبة
2:1 to 2-1883
رقم السجل
2:1 to 2-1883
موقع المكتبة
Middle East Section
التاريخ
1510
ملاحظات
This inkwell is one of the last examples of inlaid metalwork made in Iran. It was probably used by a high official of the Safavid government. The poems on it include the wish that 'the pen may write the Sultan's official signature with ink from this wellâ. The inkwell was originally attached to a pen case. Although production of objects of inlaid brass and tinned copper continued, around 1550 a new type of brassware with fine, engraved decoration emerged in Iran. Stylised plants and other ornament were shown in relief against a hatched ground, originally filled with a black compound. The decoration was often arranged in bands or cartouches that matched the shape of the object. Poetic inscriptions in the elegant ânastaâliqâ style of Persian calligraphy were also common. Human and animal motifs, absent since before 1400, reappeared.
نص عينة
Note signed on the base
Malzemeler ve teknikler
Brass, engraved and inlaid with silver Brass Silver Engraving Inlay
Parçalar
Ink Pot, Lid
Fiziksel açıklama
Ink pot with cylindrical base with onion-domed lid, surmounted by a small loop. Pot is engraved with epigraphic friezes around base and top, and both lid and pot are decorated with panels and cartouches containing engraved inscription and geometric designs. Parts of the engraved areas are inlaid with silver.
Üslup
Islamic Safavid