LONDON.- Sotheby's announced the sale of important historical documentation relating to the design and production of the Kiswah. Dar al-Kiswah was the highly prestigious Cairo studio, which produced the Kiswah, the sumptuous cloth, decorated with verses from the Koran which covers the Kabah, between 1818 and 1961. Every piece of embroidery created by its highly skilled artisans was a work of art.
The collection (estimated at £60,000-80,000*) includes 16 templates and watercolour designs, as well as rare embroidery stencils for the Kiswah. It also features a fascinating series of photographs of the craftsmen, each individually named and ranked by experience, revealing the human story of the generations of family members employed by the studio. The exquisite quality of their work was internationally acclaimed and the sale includes two certificates awarding gold medals to Dar al-Kishwah in the 1930s.
The material to be offered also includes a large number of books and items relating to the Hajj, including a pilgrims pocket Quran from the early 20th Century; a collection of Islamic coins (c.1927-1956) witnessing the formation of the new kingdom of Saudi Arabia; two photographs by the great Egyptian traveller Muhammad Saoudi; early photographs of the Mahmal procession in Cairo and pilgrims returning from Makkah. The Keeper of the Prophets mosque at Madinah by Sadiq Bey (c.1881) forms part of an important group of 11 photographs and illustrations of the Mahmal, officials and pilgrims and other documents.
The collection forms part of Sothebys London Travel, Atlases, Maps and Natural History Sale: Tuesday 10th May 2011. Exhibition at New Bond Street Thursday through Monday 9th May