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Ilkhanid Brass Bowl.
Fars, Western Iran, Late 13th to early 14th century.
Brass.
Of early-Ilkhanate form, with rounded base and convex shoulder rising to a flattened rim, in contrast to bowls of the later period, with straight walls (see, for example, a bowl dated to 1375-1400 in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London (accession no. 6-1886)).1 The shoulder is engraved and inlaid with zodiacal cartouches, separated by small roundels with a familiar Z-shaped pattern, described by Melikian Chirvani as ‘a six-spoked wheel.’2 Underneath this, a band of thin arrowheads are incised. Horizontal slim bands of pattern fill the transition between shoulder and rim: an incised chain pattern, scrolling vine with a trefoil at the centre of the volutes, spiky braid, and interlocking vine. This repertoire is seen on objects from Fars, Western Iran, dating to the late 13th and early 14th centuries: a Fars candlestick, dated 1220-1250, in the Victoria & Albert museum (accession no. 571-1878); a ewer in the Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg (no. ИР-1479), dated to the late 13th century; and a bowl of the same early form, dated 1300-1325, in the Louvre, Paris (accession no. AOR 41/93).
The zodiac is represented as:
Aries (al-haml) – a ram walking from left to right.
Taurus (al-thawr) – a ram walking from left to right
Gemini (al-jawzā’) a figure sitting cross-legged with two heads.
Cancer (al-saratān) a personified crab over the sea, symbolised by a semicircle
Leo (al-asad) is shown as a lion in front of a sun.
Virgo (al-sunbula, ‘the ear of corn’) is a man sitting crossed legged holding ears of corn in his hands.
Libra (al-mīzān) is a man sitting cross-legged, holding a beam balancing two baskets. He seems to rub his head in confusion.
Scorpio (al-‘aqrab) a man sitting cross-legged holding a sword in his left hand and a large scorpion in his right.
Sagittarius (al-qaws) is symbolised by a man about to release an arrow from. His bow at a dragon.
Capricorn (al-jadī) is a goat with large horns.
Aquarius (sāqī al-mā’) is a man sitting with one leg over the other, pulling water from a well.
Pisces (al-samakatāni) is a cross-legged man holding out a fish in each hand.3
The heads of both man and beast face towards the left. The heads of all the humans are surrounded by haloes, in which traces of silver inlay remain.
n.b. accession nos are clickable links
[1] Melikian-Chirvani, Assadullah Souren. Islamic Metalwork from the Iranian World, 8th-18th Centuries. London: HMSO, 1982. p. 149.
[2] Ibid. p. 176.
[3] Carboni, Stefano. Following the Stars: Images of the Zodiac in Islamic Art. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1997. pp. 25-45.
The BADA Standard
- Since 1918, BADA has been the leading association for the antiques and fine art trade
- Members are elected for their knowledge, integrity and quality of stock
- Our clients are protected by BADA’s code of conduct
- Our dealers’ membership is reviewed and renewed annually
- Bada.org is a non-profit site: clients deal directly with members and they pay no hidden fees