A COURTIER HOLDING A BOTTLE
A COURTIER HOLDING A BOTTLE
A COURTIER HOLDING A BOTTLE
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PROPERTY OF A SWISS LADY
A COURTIER HOLDING A BOTTLE

SIGNED MUHAMMAD 'ALI, SAFAVID ISFAHAN, CIRCA 1650

Details
A COURTIER HOLDING A BOTTLE
SIGNED MUHAMMAD 'ALI, SAFAVID ISFAHAN, CIRCA 1650
Opaque pigments heightened with gold on paper, inscribed lower left, laid down within narrow buff and gold-sprinkled borders and polychrome rules in green margins decorated with gold illuminated animals and birds, the verso plain, two collection stickers
Painting 4 ½ x 1 3/8in. (11.5 x 4.3cm.); folio 10 1⁄8 x 6in. (25.7 x 15.4cm.)
Provenance
H. Kevorkian (d. 1962), New York, no.1750 (per sticker on reverse)
'Property of a Qajar Prince and his Family', Christie’s London, 19 October 1993, lot 107

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Lot Essay


The pair to our portrait is published in Toby Falk (ed.), Treasures of Islam, exhibition catalogue, Geneva, 1985, p.122, no.93. That painting depicts a pageboy holding a blue and white bowl and wearing a green robe, decorated in a manner very similar to ours. Like ours, the Geneva page-boy is signed by Muhammad ‘Ali. Massumeh Farhad writes of Muhammad ‘Ali as one of Reza ‘Abbasi’s foremost followers and one who drew upon his master’s artistic achievements to develop his own personal calligraphic style. Describing the Geneva painting she writes that ‘the crisp, clean lines delineating the figure…have been reduced to the most essential, while…creating a subtle interplay of colours’. She writes of how equal attention is lavished on the carefully composed flower bushes producing an effect not unlike that of some Safavid textiles (Falk, op.cit., p.122).

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