c. 1335
This folio is from a celebrated copy of the text known as the Great Ilkhanid Shahnama, one of the most complex masterpieces of Persian art. Because of its lavish production, it is assumed to have been commissioned by a high-ranking member of the Ilkhanid court and produced at the court scriptorium. The fifty-seven surviving illustrations reflect the intense interest in historical chronicles and the experimental approach to painting of the Ilkhanid period (1256–1335). The eclectic paintings reveal the cosmopolitanism of the Ilkhanid court in Tabriz, which teemed with merchants, missionaries, and diplomats from as far away as Europe and China. Here the Iranian king Bahram Gur wears a robe made of European fabric to slay a fearsome horned wolf in a setting marked by the conventions of Chinese landscape painting.
folio: 41.5 x 30 cm (16 5/16 x 11 13/16 in.)
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, New York, NY, (by 1948), bequest; to Fogg Art Museum, 1960.
Ink, opaque watercolor and gold on paper
14th centuryPersianInk, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper
14th centuryPersianInk and watercolors on paper.
14th centuryPersianInk and opaque watercolor on paper
13th-14th centuryPersianInk, opaque watercolor and gold on paper
14th centuryPersianInk, opaque watercolor and gold on paper
14th centuryPersianInk, opaque watercolor and gold on paper
14th centuryPersianInk, opaque watercolor and gold on paper
14th centuryPersianInk, colors, and gold on paper
14th centuryPersianInk, opaque watercolor and gold on paper
14th centuryPersianInk, colors, and gold on paper
14th centuryPersianInk, colors, gold, and silver on paper
14th centuryPersian