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Friday, November 22, 2024 |
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Explore the arts of the Islamic world & Asia with over 300 lots on view at Sotheby's London |
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A 17th-century North Indian tent Qanat panel with foliate stems within niches. Est. £25,000-40,000. Courtesy Sotheby's.
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LONDON.- The sale will offer thirty-five beautiful pieces from the collection of the late H. Peter Stern, an avid traveller who co-founded the Storm King Art Center the worlds most important modern sculpture garden and served as Vice Chair of the World Monuments Fund. His pursuit of a global idyll is reflected in his collection, with Ottoman mounted panels of silk and velvet brocade and Mughal velvet tent hangings, adorned with floral motifs, sitting alongside delicate architectural Company School watercolours. Stern lived with these treasures in his home, Cedar House, in the lower Hudson Valley eclectically decorated, as he mixed East and West, ancient and modern, intellectual, spiritual and cultural.
A further tranche of five pieces will be sold in New York on 22 June, as part of the India, Himalayan, Southeast Asian Works of Art sale.
A 17th-century North Indian tent Qanat panel with foliate stems within niches (est. £25,000-40,000)
Qanat panels provided an important element for the interior decoration of the Mughal court, moved around in the palaces and the tents of hunting parties. Emperor Jahangirs passionate interest in botany permeated the court ateliers, and the pattern of a flowering shrub became one of the most popular motifs.
A Diwan of Hafiz dated 1462 AD, copied by Shaykh Mahmud Pir Budaqi, dedicated to the library of Prince Pir Budaq, Iraq (est. £80,000-120,000)
This magnificent Persian manuscript is illuminated in gold on gold and bears a dedication to one of the most important patrons in fifteenth-century Central Asia, the Qara Qoyunlu prince Pir Budaq. Pir Budaq was the rebellious eldest son of the ruler, and was sent by his father to Iraq, taking with him a caravan of talented artists, scribes and master craftsmen in 1458. Whilst Governor of Baghdad, his flourishing court challenged his fathers authority, resulting in an eighteenmonth siege, and the death of the prince in 1466.
Numerous manuscripts dedicated to the keen bibliophile have survived in institutions and private collections today, and this previously unrecorded Diwan is an important witness to the grandeur that must have been his library.
Jafar Ghazi arrived in Europe from Iran at a young age, settling in Munich, where he housed a large library of manuscripts. When Ghazi died at the age of 86, a number of missing manuscripts was reported to the police. In 2011, a cache of 175 pieces were discovered, the most significant of which were sold at Sothebys in October 2016 and April 2017. The present, and arguably most important manuscript among the missing group, remained lost until January 2020 when it was finally rediscovered and returned to the family of the late collector.
A Kashan turquoise glazed pottery pitcher, circa 1200-20 AD Persia (est. £120,000-160,000)
This exquisite pitcher evidences the dramatic innovations in ceramic decoration by the end of the twelfth century in Persia, with the extraordinary complexity and freedom of its design. A layered series of motifs wraps around the turquoise body, integrating intricate palmette medallions with cursive inscriptions.
In the early 1940s, this piece was thought to have been discovered among a number of similar vessels that had been buried in large pottery oil-jars in Gurgan. They may possibly have been the supply of a merchant who had imported them from Kashan and hidden them for safekeeping on the eve of the Mongol invasions.
Originally published in 1949, the pitcher was previously exhibited at the Smithsonian Institute in Washington D.C. (1966-68), as well as the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (1985), it will now go on public view for the first time since then.
An Almohad or Nasrid pyxis from 12th/13th century Spain (est. £200,000-300,000)
One of the earliest manifestations of a decorative technique that is often associated with the medieval Muslim Mediterranean, this previously unpublished octagonal box is set to make its auction debut, having remained in the same collection since the 1970s. Artefacts from this period of al-Andalus history are rare and this piece joins a small group of woodwork dating to the late twelfth or early thirteenth century that used the traditional micro-mosaic, geometric incrustation.
A Nav Lara jewelled and enamelled nine-row pearl necklace, late 19th / early 20th-century India (est. £40,000-50,000)
Featuring nine rows of pearls, each suspending delicately enamelled gemset pendants, culminating in a carved emerald bead, this statement necklace was crafted in India as European nobility clamoured for the latest crosscultural fashions. A closely comparable example was formerly worn by famous Egyptian singer Umm Kulthum and was recently exhibited at the Louvre Abu Dhabi. This piece is part of a wider selection that was once in the possession of an Indian maharani.
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