John Young. Othman Kahn I, from Portraits of the Emperors of Turkey. 1815. England. Mezzotint, hand-colored with brush and watercolor, on ivory wove paper The engraver John Young produced several books of mezzotints after paintings in British collections. Sultan Selim III commissioned him to make a series after portraits of the emperors of Turkey before 1807, but production halted when janissaries assassinated the sultan. Mahmoud II ascended the throne, and Youngresumed work in 1810. There were 28 mezzotints in this expansive example of the Ottoman Empire’s patronage of Western artists. This s


John Young. Othman Kahn I, from Portraits of the Emperors of Turkey. 1815. England. Mezzotint, hand-colored with brush and watercolor, on ivory wove paper The engraver John Young produced several books of mezzotints after paintings in British collections. Sultan Selim III commissioned him to make a series after portraits of the emperors of Turkey before 1807, but production halted when janissaries assassinated the sultan. Mahmoud II ascended the throne, and Youngresumed work in 1810. There were 28 mezzotints in this expansive example of the Ottoman Empire’s patronage of Western artists. This sheet shows the founder of the Ottoman dynasty, Othman (or Osman) the first. He reigned from 1299 to 1326 and was said to be a great tactician known for his stern demeanor and bushy moustache.


Size: 2148px × 3000px
Photo credit: © WBC ART / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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