Inscribed Bowl dated 942/ 1535–36 Al-Imami Sayyid Naqqash al-Husaini The defining elements of this bowl—cloud scrolls, cartouches, interlacing roundels, and the "Y" pattern—point to Safavid Tabriz as the most likely place of production. Immediately below the rim is a Shi'i prayer in naskh script. Enclosed in the cartouches are verses invoking abundance and happiness. The name of the owner, Qasim ibn Husain Qannadi, the artist’s signature, and the date of manufacture appear further down, in the row of quatrefoils. The bowl can also be linked to the late fifteenth?century Turkmen schoo


Inscribed Bowl dated 942/ 1535–36 Al-Imami Sayyid Naqqash al-Husaini The defining elements of this bowl—cloud scrolls, cartouches, interlacing roundels, and the "Y" pattern—point to Safavid Tabriz as the most likely place of production. Immediately below the rim is a Shi'i prayer in naskh script. Enclosed in the cartouches are verses invoking abundance and happiness. The name of the owner, Qasim ibn Husain Qannadi, the artist’s signature, and the date of manufacture appear further down, in the row of quatrefoils. The bowl can also be linked to the late fifteenth?century Turkmen school of metalwork, which had close stylistic ties to the arts of the Ottoman and Mamluk Inscribed Bowl. dated 942/ 1535–36. Copper; tinned, engraved, and inlaid with black compound. Made in Iran, probably Tabriz. Metal


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Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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