Arts of the Islamic World & India
Arts of the Islamic World & India
Auction Closed
October 23, 01:24 PM GMT
Estimate
20,000 - 30,000 GBP
Lot Details
Description
pencil, pigments and ink on paper heightened with gold and an inscription in brown ink in the top right hand corner, traces of a late 15th or 16th century seal impression, laid down on an album page of text in nasta'liq script, 11 lines of text within 2 columns, headings in red, from a manuscript of poetry (text unidentified), with a heading bearing Qur’an chapter XII (Yusuf), part of verse 12
16.5cm. by 8.5cm.
Ex-collection Dr. Ebadollah Bahari, London
inscriptions
With an inscription giving the name ‘Sultan Ahmed khan ibn Sultan …’ and the date 1020 AH/1611-12 AD:
'… He who does so is ignorant and unenlightened
Sultan Ahmed Khan son of Sultan
… May God forgive his sins
… (Wednes/Thurs)day the Twenty
-fifth … of the Prophet, may peace and blessings of God be upon him
And his family.'
Ottoman Sultan Ahmed I (r.1603-17) was a bibliophile and avid collector of works on paper. He commissioned two imperial albums (now in the Topkapi Palace Museum Library, B.408 and H.2161) which were produced under the supervision of the album maker Kalender (See Emine Fetvaci’s articles, 'The Album of Ahmed I', Ars Orientalis, Vol.42, 2012, pp.127-138 and 'The Gaze in the Album of Ahmed I', Muqarnas, Vol.32, 2015, pp.135-154).
Ahmed was also interested in the imperial albums containing Timurid, Aqqoyunlu and Safavid drawings and calligraphies (the so-called ‘Topkapi albums’ or ‘saray albums’) collected in the Topkapi Palace. He studied these albums regularly and sometimes wrote short attributions, notes and poems on their margins. Two of the Topkapi albums include Ahmed’s handwriting and signature: the Aqqoyunlu Yaqub Beg’s first album (H.2153, f.87b) and the album of Ahmed I himself (B.408, f.5b). Many of Ahmed’s attributions are to Muhammad Siyah Qalam (for example on Album H.2153, f.6b.), catalogued by Michael Rogers as “probably in the hand of the Ottoman Sultan Ahmed I” (Rogers et al 1986, p.118, pl.74). This folio includes a very similar handwritten note to that on the present painting.
Both Yaqub Beg albums in the Topkapi Library, Istanbul (H.2153 and H.2160) include fifteenth-century drawings of wolves comparable to those in the present drawing (H.2153, f.171a and H.2160 f.95a, published in ibid. p.155, pl.104-6). A related drawing of birds and beasts in a flowery landscape, attributed to Muhammad Siyah Qalam, is in the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art (inv. no.43-6/2).
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