Bowl with Seated Couple
Artist | |
Name | Unknown |
Basic Info | |
Period | Seljuk-Atabeg period |
Created in | Middle East, Iran, Kashan |
Century | 12th-13th century |
Dimensions | 9.5 x 21.1 cm (3 3/4 x 8 5/16 in.) |
Harvard Museum | |
Department | Department of Islamic & Later Indian Art |
Division | Asian and Mediterranean Art |
Contact | am_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu |
Context
31 Bowl with seated couple Iran, Seljuk-Atabeg period, 12th–13th century[1] Fritware painted with luster (copper and silver) over white lead alkali glaze opacified with tin 9.5 × 21.1 cm (3 3/4 × 8 5/16 in.) 2002.50.73 On the interior of this bowl, a seated couple flanks a central, checkered tree, which— together with the fish swimming below and a busy network of thin, curving vines— conveys the idea of a garden setting. Along the walls of the bowl are six roundels decorated alternately with harpies and human figures. Like birds, harpies are commonly found in Persian Islamic ceramics and usually carry auspicious connotations. The area just below the rim is decorated with a pseudo-inscription with plaited verticals. The exterior features double vertical lines bracketing loosely painted scrolls. Recent museum conservation of the bowl has showed it to be made up of fifteen major fragments, but all join fairly smoothly, indicating that nothing has been lost from the original object. The luster is brilliant and reddish in tone. Ayşin Yoltar-Yıldırım [1] This bowl is of “ancient origin,” according to the results of thermoluminescence analysis carried out by the Research Laboratory of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in 1973.
Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, The Norma Jean Calderwood Collection of Islamic Art