Folio from 16th Century Persian 'Book of Kings' sells for £8.1 million
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, December 22, 2024


Folio from 16th Century Persian 'Book of Kings' sells for £8.1 million
A leaf from one of the finest illustrated manuscripts in existence, the lot sparked more than ten minutes of determined bidding. Courtesy Sotheby's.



LONDON.- In a rare appearance at auction, a magnificent folio from the Shah Tahmasp Shahnameh today sold for £8,061,700 / $9,091,179. The manuscript set a new record in GBP for any Islamic object or work on paper at auction, surpassing the previous record set by another leaf from the same manuscript at Sotheby's in 2011*.

The scene depicts the great hero Rustam recovering his horse Rakhsh – named the Persian word for lightning – two of the main figures over the course of the tale. The manuscript boasts a glittering provenance from the moment it was commissioned, to the present day. It was commissioned by one emperor, Shah Ismail (the first of the Safavids), completed by another, his son and successor Shah Tahmasp, gifted to a third, Sultan Selim II of the Ottoman Empire, and was later owned by one of the great bibliophilic families of the modern era, the Barons de Rothschild, whose collections included such masterpieces as the Belles Heures of the Duc de Berry and the Hours of Catherine of Cleves. Today, folios from the Shahnameh are treasured in museum collections internationally, including New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C., the Aga Khan Museum Collection, the Museum of Islamic Art, Doha, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tehran.

“The Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp is universally acknowledged as one of the supreme illustrated manuscripts of any period or culture and ranking among the greatest works of art in the world. It is testament to the sheer artistic skill, patronage and beauty that two folios from the same legendary manuscript now hold the top two highest prices for any Islamic work on paper, with a new auction record set." --Benedict Carter, Head of Department, Sotheby’s Islamic & Indian Art

The “Arts of The Islamic World & India” took place today, totalling £13,922,327, as part of Sotheby's Islamic, South Asian & Middle Eastern Week in London. The sale also saw a monumental leaf from one of the largest Kufic Qur’ans of the eighth century sell for £819,000, and a monumental cast and engraved bronze multiple-wick oil lamp from 11th century Andalusia bring £1,608,000.

Earlier in the week, the online sale of Modern and Contemporary Arab and Iranian art was led by a joyful abstract Californian landscape from 1970 by beloved Lebanese painter and poet Etel Adnan - setting a new auction record for the artist at £403,200 (est. £100,000-150,000). It had been gifted directly from Etel to the current owner, her close family friends, soon after it was painted and had never been on the market since. The proceeds from the sale will be going to Berlin Glas, a non-profit glass factory in Berlin that offers opportunities to people interested in glass as a medium for artistic expression with a programme of public events and workshops. For more information on the lot, read the catalogue note here.

*The previous record for an Islamic Work on Paper at auction was set for another illustrated folio from the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp, which sold from the collection of renowned scholar Stuart Cary Welch at Sotheby's in 2011, making £7,433,250 ($12,153,364).










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