Tile panel

Title Tile panel
Author Unknown
Publication Date: 1600
Publication Place Iran (made) Isfahan (made) -
Subject Busts Women
Type Other
Language Undetermined
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Physical Dimensions Height: 91.4cm, Width: 68.6cm, Estimated weight: 70kg
Library: Victoria and Albert Museum
Library Asset ID 9-1877
Record ID 9-1877
Library Location Middle East Section
Date 1600
Notes These wall tiles were made around 1600-50, in the city of Isfahan, which was then the capital of Iran. They were probably remounted together on this panel not long before they were sold to the V&A in 1877. The tiles include thirteen bust portraits of fashionable men and women of the day. These portraits recall the graceful style of the artist Riza Abbasi (d.1635), who specialised in single portraits of wealthy members of Isfahan society. These tiles and others of this type are often referred to as 'Kubachi' tiles. This is because the bowls and other vessels made by the same potters and painted in the same range of colours are called 'Kubachi' wares. This is a misnomer, which came about because large numbers of these vessels came on to the art market about 1900 after they were discovered in houses in the small town of Kubachi in the Caucasus Mountains. This town in Daghestan, now part of Russia, specialised in decorating arms and armour with damascened patterns in gold over a very long period, and its inhabitants were relatively prosperous. It seems that they imported large numbers of 'Kubachi' vessels and used many of them to decorate their houses rather than for serving food, which explains why they survived. At first it was thought that the vessels had been made in Kubachi. Later it was realised that they were made in Iran, and they were attributed to Tabriz, the most important city near the Caucasus. More recently, analysis of the body material has shown that they were made in the Isfahan area, and this is in tune with their decoration.
İlişki Caspar Purdon Clarke
Malzemeler ve teknikler Coarse fritware, underglaze-painted with colours and slips, under clear crackled glaze Fritware Painted Glazed
Fiziksel açıklama Panel of twenty-eight glazed tiles, with thirteen separate bust portraits of Safavid women and men, one holding a wine-cup, another carrying a large jar
Üretim Kubachi-type
Üslup Safavid
View in source Victoria and Albert Museum Victoria and Albert Museum - Ottoman library catalog search
Victoria and Albert Museum - Ottoman library catalog search Victoria and Albert Museum

Tile panel

Author Unknown
Publication Date 1600
Publication Place Iran (made) Isfahan (made) -
Subject Busts Women
Type Other
Language Undetermined
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Physical Dimensions Height: 91.4cm, Width: 68.6cm, Estimated weight: 70kg
Library Victoria and Albert Museum
Library Asset ID 9-1877
Record ID 9-1877
Library Location Middle East Section
Date 1600
Notes These wall tiles were made around 1600-50, in the city of Isfahan, which was then the capital of Iran. They were probably remounted together on this panel not long before they were sold to the V&A in 1877. The tiles include thirteen bust portraits of fashionable men and women of the day. These portraits recall the graceful style of the artist Riza Abbasi (d.1635), who specialised in single portraits of wealthy members of Isfahan society. These tiles and others of this type are often referred to as 'Kubachi' tiles. This is because the bowls and other vessels made by the same potters and painted in the same range of colours are called 'Kubachi' wares. This is a misnomer, which came about because large numbers of these vessels came on to the art market about 1900 after they were discovered in houses in the small town of Kubachi in the Caucasus Mountains. This town in Daghestan, now part of Russia, specialised in decorating arms and armour with damascened patterns in gold over a very long period, and its inhabitants were relatively prosperous. It seems that they imported large numbers of 'Kubachi' vessels and used many of them to decorate their houses rather than for serving food, which explains why they survived. At first it was thought that the vessels had been made in Kubachi. Later it was realised that they were made in Iran, and they were attributed to Tabriz, the most important city near the Caucasus. More recently, analysis of the body material has shown that they were made in the Isfahan area, and this is in tune with their decoration.
İlişki Caspar Purdon Clarke
Malzemeler ve teknikler Coarse fritware, underglaze-painted with colours and slips, under clear crackled glaze Fritware Painted Glazed
Fiziksel açıklama Panel of twenty-eight glazed tiles, with thirteen separate bust portraits of Safavid women and men, one holding a wine-cup, another carrying a large jar
Üretim Kubachi-type
Üslup Safavid
Victoria and Albert Museum - Ottoman library catalog search
Victoria and Albert Museum You are being redirected...

Please wait