Gudarz Pays Homage to Kay Khusraw and Shows Him the Enemy Corpses (painting, verso; text, recto), folio from a manuscript of the Shahnama by Firdawsi
Artist | |
Name | Unknown |
Basic Info | |
Period | Safavid period |
Created in | Middle East, Iran, Shiraz |
Century | 16th century |
Culture | Persian |
Dimensions | 42.9 x 27.1 cm (16 7/8 x 10 11/16 in.) |
Harvard Museum | |
Department | Department of Islamic & Later Indian Art |
Division | Asian and Mediterranean Art |
Contact | am_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu |
Context
98 Gudarz Pays Homage to Kay Khusraw and Shows Him the Enemy Corpses Recto: text, with title “Kay Khusraw arrives at the camp” Verso: text and illustration Folio: 42.9 × 27.1 cm (16 7/8 × 10 11/16 in.) 2002.50.38 After assuming the throne, Kay Khusraw summoned his best warriors, heroes, and chieftains to battle Afrasiyab and the Turanians. When the war was nearly won, the king came to join his forces. In the painting he and the hero Rustam appear on horseback at the left. The Iranian warrior Gudarz and his sons have dismounted, and one of them kneels in front of Rustam and Kay Khusraw. Four severed heads on the ground between the two groups and five more on spikes at upper right represent the enemy corpses mentioned in the text and offer proof of the Iranians’ success. The composition is studded with soldiers, mounted or on foot, observing the event. Mika M. Natif
Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, The Norma Jean Calderwood Collection of Islamic Art