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A rare Safavid oil painting depicting a lady in European dress standing in an interior Persia, p...

In Islamic and Indian Art Online

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A rare Safavid oil painting depicting a lady in European dress standing in an interior Persia, p...
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London, United Kingdom

A rare Safavid oil painting depicting a lady in European dress standing in an interior Persia, probably Isfahan, middle or second half of the 17th Century oil on canvas, with arched top the painting 178.5 x 158 cm.; with frame 189 x 168 cm. Footnotes: Provenance Brought to Paris in 1920s by a foreign envoy. Purchased from the envoy by a previous owner in 1974. Christie's, Islamic Art and Manuscripts, 11th April 2000, lot 105. Private European collection, 2000-present. Isfahan was referred to as 'half the world' (nisf-i jahan) by the 16th Century. Shah 'Abbas (reg. 1588-1629) had moved his capital from Qazwin, Safavid political power had grown, there was a flowering of culture in Persia, and Isfahan, in particular, became a nexus of trade and cultural exchange. Along with the Ottoman Sultan and the 'Grand Mughal', Safavid Persia and Shah 'Abbas ('The Sophy' or 'The Great Sophy', an expression probably deriving from a mishearing of 'Safavi'), were touchstones of grandeur and exoticism in Western consciousness at the time. One thinks of the striking image, spread across a double page in a folio volume, of the Maidan-i Naqsh-i Jahan in Isfahan, in Voyages de Corneille le Brun par la Moscovie, en Perse, et aux Orientales (Amsterdam 1718) – where the broken lines of the tents of the bazaar, where all sorts of business was being transacted amongst several nationalities, contrast with the more austere lines of the Safavid architecture surrounding them. As Cornelius de Bruyn's accompanying account put it: 'The greater part of this plaza is full of tents, where all kinds of things are sold [...] One continually sees a prodigious crowd of people and among other things a large number of people of quality who come and go to the court' (see S. R. Canby, Shah 'Abbas: the Remaking of Iran (London 2009), pp. 260-261, no. 127, illustrated). For a fine Safavid painting depicting an African soldier, circa 1680-90, emblematic of the melting pot of Safavid Isfahan in the 17th Century, see the sale in these rooms, Bonhams, Islamic and Indian Art, 30th March 2021, lot 28. The clock resting on the table to the right-hand side of the figure is probably an example of a type made in Germany, mainly in the first half of the 17th Century, although similar German examples are also dated to the mid-late 16th Century. An example from 1573 (in the Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore) is illustrated in K. Maurice and O. Mayr (ed.), Clockwork Universe: German Clocks and Automata, 1550-1650, 1980, cat. 16), and features the double dials present in our painting, in addition to clawed feet. A further example, sold in these rooms, bears comparable metal strapwork around the bell (see Bonhams, The Art of Time, 4 December 2017, lot 18). The panel visible on the side of the clock in the present lot may be a glazed side panel, an element which also features on German clocks of the period (for a mid-17th Century example, see Bonhams, Fine Watches & Wristwatches Including a Private English Collection, 11 June 2013, lot 45). A LADY IN EUROPEAN DRESS, LATER 17TH CENTURY ISFAHAN by Eleanor Sims An undated, unsigned full-length painting shows a lady in European dress standing in a rather dark, if windowed, interior; she faces left and holds a full-blown rose in her right hand. The picture is painted in oil-pigments on canvas. Its pointed, ogival shape identifies it as a decorative element most probably intended for a traditional Iranian structure, having arched, pointed interior niches and windows. Its shape was effected by the addition of a roughly triangular piece of cloth stitched onto the pictorial support, at about three-quarters of its height, probably done well before the picture had been begun. Occurring together, the classically Iranian shape and the lady's European dress and uncovered head, are unusual. For the painting clearly 'belongs' to a particular type of somewhat earlier 17th-century Persian painting: full-length, oil-painted pictures of men and women, virtually always presented as pairs of the types of persons encountered in 17th-century Safavid Isfahan. Usually it is the Persian style of garb and, and occasional other details, that distinguish the subjects of these paintings as Persians, whether Muslims, or Christian Armenians or Georgians. At present, over 20 such paintings can be documented, in addition to several other similar pictures with pointed tops, although the broad width of the present painting sets it quite apart from these latter three. Despite its traditional Iranian shape and the European garb of its subject, almost every other element of its setting derives from this odd genre of 17th-century Safavid painting, in which the richest and most impressive of European features figure prominently. The simple tapered column at the right supported on a square stone pedestal; the heavy dark-green curtain descending from the point of the ogive; and the rectangular table at the left of the painting, spread with a floor-length lavender-grey cloth on which are arranged several European objects: a footed German table-clock with two faces; a pocket-watch in a gold case with its little gold winding-key on a black cord, lying on the table beside; and several piles of gold coins that seem to have milled edges. All of these appear in a similar position, in one of the more famous Safavid paintings of this sub-genre (also unsigned and undated): a well-dressed beardless youth standing on a terrace behind which - at the left - is a view of a body of water lying in front of a distant landscape. The compositional type is often called 'The Portrait with a Prospect', and the painting in question is one of three presently known from the 'First Prospect Suite'. All are notable for their handsome architectural features - the twisted stone column, the carved stone pedestal, the red-stone balustrade, and the chequered red-and-white stone floor, all of distinctly noble materials and design. (See Eleanor Sims, 'Five Seventeenth-Century Persian Oil Paintings', in Persian and Mughal Art, ed. Michael Goedhuis, London: P & D Colnaghi & Co Ltd, 1976, pp. 221–248, fig. 138.) Together with a companion-picture of a Georgian female, the Persian youth is now in the Saadabad Palace Museum in Tehran, while one more picture from this suite, an Armenian Lady, is in the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha (see E. Sims, 'Six Seventeenth-century Oil Paintings from Safavid Persia', in God is Beautiful and Loves Beauty: The Object in Islamic Art and Culture, New Haven and London 2013, fig. 295). On the table beside the Persian youth in Tehran are the same objects as on the table in the present painting. The numerals on the upper, and larger, of the two clock-faces are given in Roman letters and read, from XII at the top centre, circling downward to the right, in European fashion. Of faint significance may be the fact that on the smaller clock-face of the Bonhams painting, the numerals read in the opposite direction, downward from left to right: I, II, III, VI. At the left of the present painting, just above the table, is an open window, with a view of a landscape with gentle hills in the foreground, and snow-capped mountains in the distance: a somewhat less grand version of the 'Prospect' in all the pictures comprising the 'First Prospect Suite'. For approximately half a century, the working assumption on the date and origin of these oddly unsettling oil-paintings of standing figures in elaborate 17th-century Persian garb, was that they had been executed in Safavid Isfahan by Iranian painters (of For further information about this lot please visit the lot listing

A rare Safavid oil painting depicting a lady in European dress standing in an interior Persia, probably Isfahan, middle or second half of the 17th Century oil on canvas, with arched top the painting 178.5 x 158 cm.; with frame 189 x 168 cm. Footnotes: Provenance Brought to Paris in 1920s by a foreign envoy. Purchased from the envoy by a previous owner in 1974. Christie's, Islamic Art and Manuscripts, 11th April 2000, lot 105. Private European collection, 2000-present. Isfahan was referred to as 'half the world' (nisf-i jahan) by the 16th Century. Shah 'Abbas (reg. 1588-1629) had moved his capital from Qazwin, Safavid political power had grown, there was a flowering of culture in Persia, and Isfahan, in particular, became a nexus of trade and cultural exchange. Along with the Ottoman Sultan and the 'Grand Mughal', Safavid Persia and Shah 'Abbas ('The Sophy' or 'The Great Sophy', an expression probably deriving from a mishearing of 'Safavi'), were touchstones of grandeur and exoticism in Western consciousness at the time. One thinks of the striking image, spread across a double page in a folio volume, of the Maidan-i Naqsh-i Jahan in Isfahan, in Voyages de Corneille le Brun par la Moscovie, en Perse, et aux Orientales (Amsterdam 1718) – where the broken lines of the tents of the bazaar, where all sorts of business was being transacted amongst several nationalities, contrast with the more austere lines of the Safavid architecture surrounding them. As Cornelius de Bruyn's accompanying account put it: 'The greater part of this plaza is full of tents, where all kinds of things are sold [...] One continually sees a prodigious crowd of people and among other things a large number of people of quality who come and go to the court' (see S. R. Canby, Shah 'Abbas: the Remaking of Iran (London 2009), pp. 260-261, no. 127, illustrated). For a fine Safavid painting depicting an African soldier, circa 1680-90, emblematic of the melting pot of Safavid Isfahan in the 17th Century, see the sale in these rooms, Bonhams, Islamic and Indian Art, 30th March 2021, lot 28. The clock resting on the table to the right-hand side of the figure is probably an example of a type made in Germany, mainly in the first half of the 17th Century, although similar German examples are also dated to the mid-late 16th Century. An example from 1573 (in the Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore) is illustrated in K. Maurice and O. Mayr (ed.), Clockwork Universe: German Clocks and Automata, 1550-1650, 1980, cat. 16), and features the double dials present in our painting, in addition to clawed feet. A further example, sold in these rooms, bears comparable metal strapwork around the bell (see Bonhams, The Art of Time, 4 December 2017, lot 18). The panel visible on the side of the clock in the present lot may be a glazed side panel, an element which also features on German clocks of the period (for a mid-17th Century example, see Bonhams, Fine Watches & Wristwatches Including a Private English Collection, 11 June 2013, lot 45). A LADY IN EUROPEAN DRESS, LATER 17TH CENTURY ISFAHAN by Eleanor Sims An undated, unsigned full-length painting shows a lady in European dress standing in a rather dark, if windowed, interior; she faces left and holds a full-blown rose in her right hand. The picture is painted in oil-pigments on canvas. Its pointed, ogival shape identifies it as a decorative element most probably intended for a traditional Iranian structure, having arched, pointed interior niches and windows. Its shape was effected by the addition of a roughly triangular piece of cloth stitched onto the pictorial support, at about three-quarters of its height, probably done well before the picture had been begun. Occurring together, the classically Iranian shape and the lady's European dress and uncovered head, are unusual. For the painting clearly 'belongs' to a particular type of somewhat earlier 17th-century Persian painting: full-length, oil-painted pictures of men and women, virtually always presented as pairs of the types of persons encountered in 17th-century Safavid Isfahan. Usually it is the Persian style of garb and, and occasional other details, that distinguish the subjects of these paintings as Persians, whether Muslims, or Christian Armenians or Georgians. At present, over 20 such paintings can be documented, in addition to several other similar pictures with pointed tops, although the broad width of the present painting sets it quite apart from these latter three. Despite its traditional Iranian shape and the European garb of its subject, almost every other element of its setting derives from this odd genre of 17th-century Safavid painting, in which the richest and most impressive of European features figure prominently. The simple tapered column at the right supported on a square stone pedestal; the heavy dark-green curtain descending from the point of the ogive; and the rectangular table at the left of the painting, spread with a floor-length lavender-grey cloth on which are arranged several European objects: a footed German table-clock with two faces; a pocket-watch in a gold case with its little gold winding-key on a black cord, lying on the table beside; and several piles of gold coins that seem to have milled edges. All of these appear in a similar position, in one of the more famous Safavid paintings of this sub-genre (also unsigned and undated): a well-dressed beardless youth standing on a terrace behind which - at the left - is a view of a body of water lying in front of a distant landscape. The compositional type is often called 'The Portrait with a Prospect', and the painting in question is one of three presently known from the 'First Prospect Suite'. All are notable for their handsome architectural features - the twisted stone column, the carved stone pedestal, the red-stone balustrade, and the chequered red-and-white stone floor, all of distinctly noble materials and design. (See Eleanor Sims, 'Five Seventeenth-Century Persian Oil Paintings', in Persian and Mughal Art, ed. Michael Goedhuis, London: P & D Colnaghi & Co Ltd, 1976, pp. 221–248, fig. 138.) Together with a companion-picture of a Georgian female, the Persian youth is now in the Saadabad Palace Museum in Tehran, while one more picture from this suite, an Armenian Lady, is in the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha (see E. Sims, 'Six Seventeenth-century Oil Paintings from Safavid Persia', in God is Beautiful and Loves Beauty: The Object in Islamic Art and Culture, New Haven and London 2013, fig. 295). On the table beside the Persian youth in Tehran are the same objects as on the table in the present painting. The numerals on the upper, and larger, of the two clock-faces are given in Roman letters and read, from XII at the top centre, circling downward to the right, in European fashion. Of faint significance may be the fact that on the smaller clock-face of the Bonhams painting, the numerals read in the opposite direction, downward from left to right: I, II, III, VI. At the left of the present painting, just above the table, is an open window, with a view of a landscape with gentle hills in the foreground, and snow-capped mountains in the distance: a somewhat less grand version of the 'Prospect' in all the pictures comprising the 'First Prospect Suite'. For approximately half a century, the working assumption on the date and origin of these oddly unsettling oil-paintings of standing figures in elaborate 17th-century Persian garb, was that they had been executed in Safavid Isfahan by Iranian painters (of For further information about this lot please visit the lot listing

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Stichworte: Elisabeth Vigee Le Brun, Corneille, Landscape Painting, Contemporary Art, Portrait Painting, Landscape, Öl Gemälde, Portrait, 15th-18th Century Art