Islamic ceramics sold at Sotheby's London, 26 April 2023
Lot 81. A large Kashan turquoise spouted ewer, Persia, 12th century; 24cm. height. Lot Sold 3,810 GBP (Estimate 3,000 - 5,000 GBP). © Sotheby's
intact, the slightly widening cylindrical body with rounded sloping shoulder, on short straight foot, the narrowing neck with indented vertical sections and four applied bosses on each side, terminating in a projecting tubular spout, the handle linking the mouth and shoulder with fluted thumbpiece and rope-pattern at the back, covered with a transparent turquoise glaze stopping short of the foot.
Note: The shape of this ewer derives from a known group of contemporary brass vessels, with one example in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, new York (inv.no.44.15).
Lot 81. A Timurid turquoise bowl with cloud bands, Persia, 15th century; 24cm. height. Lot Sold 38,100 GBP (Estimate 20,000 - 30,000 GBP). © Sotheby's
of deep rounded form on short, truncated foot, painted in black under a transparent turquoise glaze with concentric Chinese cloud band designs to interior and exterior, the base delineated by circular bands of squared patterns both in the cavetto and underside, old collector's label to underside of foot.
Note: This bowl is a rare example of a stylistic subtype from a wider group of fifteenth-century Persian pottery painted in black under a turquoise transparent glaze. Commonly known as ‘Kubachi’ wares, after a town in the Caucasus where many fifteenth and sixteenth-century dishes were found in the late nineteenth century, the group is distinguishable by the hang-holes drilled in the foot ring and the encrusted dirt visible on the reverse (O. Watson, Ceramics of Iran: Islamic pottery from the Sarikhani Collection, 2020, p.253).
The best known specimens of the group usually display medallions of floral patterns with incised scrollwork, some bearing dates that point to a production date in the fifteenth century (see a bowl formerly in the Kelekian collection, dated 873 AH/1468 AD, published in A. Lane, Later Islamic Pottery, London, 1957, pl.20A, alongside a bowl in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, inv.no.17.120.70). The present turquoise bowl, however, relates closely to an example in the Museum of Islamic Art, Doha (PO.93.1999), one in the Khalili Collection (inv.no.pot.878), and another published in Watson’s Ceramics of Iran (ibid., p.353, cat.182), both displaying cloud-like patterns. Another fifteeenth-century bowl in the Musée du Louvre presents a strikingly similar decoration on the reverse painted under a darker, greenish glaze (inv.no.AD 13778).
Timur was known to champion strong trade relations with neighbouring powers, and the period of Timurid dynastic rule witnessed an increased stream of artistic exchange with China contributing to the Timurid Renaissance (T. Lentz, & G. Lowry, Timur and the Princely Vision : Persian art and culture in the fifteenth century¸1989, pp.106-8). The cloud band design on the present bowl is unprecedented on glazed potteries from the early Timurid period and can thus be associated with the growing export of Ming wares to the Middle East in the fifteenth century.
Lot 110. A rare Iznik 'Golden Horn' pottery vase, Turkey, circa 1530-40; 14.3cm. height. Lot Sold 101,600 GBP (Estimate 80,000 - 120,000 GBP). © Sotheby's
with inverted pear-shaped body leading to a short inverted rim, on a short, slightly flared foot, decorated in underglaze in cobalt-blue with intricate scrolls comprising six large spiral stems divided by six cobalt-blue and turquoise flowerheads, interspersed with arabesques, a frieze of half flowerheads and a turquoise band with repeated S-shaped scrolls above and below.
Provenance: Private collection, USA, acquired by the owner's great-grandfather in Istanbul in the late 19th century.
Note: The group of wares known as 'Golden Horn' took their name from a collection of sherds discovered on the waterways of the southern shores of Istanbul in the early twentieth century (Carswell 1998, p.50). Others are said to be have been found nearby Aksaray (Atasoy and Raby 1989, p.108). They were published as ‘Golden Horn’ by Migeon and Sakisian 1923, pp.128-9, based on a record by the seventeenth century Turkish traveller Evliya Celebi. Although there are records of pottery production on the Golden Horn at this period, the association is misleading and the pieces in this group are clearly the work of the potters of Iznik and Kutahya, as further confirmed by excavations undertaken in 1984 by Professor Aslanapa in Iznik that revealed fragments of this pottery style (Aslanapa et al. 1989, p.149).
The group displays a form of decoration, predominantly a series of floral concentric spirals, which neither evolve from an Iznik antecedent nor leave a significant legacy in that tradition. Rather, the inspiration seems to come from contemporary illumination, and in particular Imperial illumination of a type found on the background of the Sultan's tughras (Atasoy and Raby 1989, p.109, fig.131). It is significant that the tughra, which acted as an imperial signature or calligraphic insigna for each Ottoman sultan, was often used on firmans, edicts made by the Sultan himself, with his tughra as a heading, that were created, issued and controlled s.olely by the Ottoman Imperial Chancery in the Topkapi Palace. Specifically trained court officials known as tughrakes, were solely in charge of drawing and illuminating these on each document. It is with Sultan Suleyman Magnificent (r.1520-66) that these works took on important oeuvres d’art with the use of expensive gold ink and detailed decorative designs within. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, houses an impressive firman bearing the tughra of Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent, inv. no. 38.149.1. Although dated to the later part of his reign, it demonstrates the evolution of this scrolling motif in its complex curved saz leaves, lotus blossoms and feathery-leaves. Sotheby's sold an early sixteenth century illuminated Qur'an copied by Mustafa Dede with a finely executed finispiece featuring a similar blue on white split palmettes scroll as on this example (8 October 2014, lot 31).
Surviving examples of ‘Golden Horn’ pottery show that while the general format of spiralling stems remained unchanged, the minor motifs and the style of drawing varied, some incorporating rounded hooks within the spiral stems (see a dish sold in these rooms, 1 May 2019, lot 130), others with hooks that curve at the tails (see a dish in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, acc.no.41.45), trefoil hooks as shown by a dish in the Waletrs Art Museum (acc.no. 48.22810 and others no hooks at all (see a mosque lamp in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, acc.no.59.69.3). The artist of this vase displays a particularly confident, free variation of the design with exuberant hook and palmette motifs that emphasise the motion of the spiral.
Moreover, craftsmen were not limited in the forms they produced and various vessels have survived including dishes, bottles, jugs, mosque lamps and tondino among others. The inverted slightly pear-shaped body of this vase is unusual in Iznik pottery where the profile is typically more globular (see, for example a water-pot sold in these rooms, 18 April 2009, lot 169) or with a rounded tapering body as shown in Iznik bottles such as an ‘Golden Horn’ bottle in the British Museum (inv.no.1878,1230.519).
The bulbous, pyriform body of the vase might be paralleled to one of the most famous pieces of the group, the Godman flask in the British Museum (Atasoy and Raby 1989, p.46), whose body is a rounded pear shape, the inverse of the present example. The fame of that bottle is in part due to its bearing an inscription with historical information on its base and collar. Unusual enough in itself, the inscription also provides a rare document of the dating and origin, in this case Kutahya, 1529, giving a relatively secure dating for the Golden Horn wares. The vase shares further similarities with the present vase such as the of repeated ‘S’ motifs above the register of scrolls and a relatively free style of drawing. Both examples present a similar pattern of large craquelure and slight pitting in the glaze which might suggest a similar place of production.
Examples of comparable 'Golden Horn' wares in museum and personal collections include:
Dish, David Collection, Copenhagen, inv. no. 43-1973.
Dish, Sadberk Hanim Museum, Istanbul, inv. no. 301.3904.
Dish, British Museum, London, inv. no. 87.6-17.9.
Dish, British Museum, London, inv. no. G.1983.17.
Dish, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, inv. no. 66.4.11.
Dish, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, inv. no. 41.45.
Dish, Kuwait National Museum, inv. no. LNS 231C.
Dish, Musée de l’Institut du Monde Arabe, Paris, inv. no. 55.92.
Dish, Sotheby’s, New York, 21 May 1981, lot 218 (ex-collection Egene Bernat).
Bowl, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, inv. no. 790-1905.
Bowl, Atasoy and Raby 1989, p.109, no.135.
Bowl, Museum fur Islamische Kunst, Berlin, inv. no. 1.5567.
Footed bowl, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, inv. no. 243-1876.
Bowl with missing foot, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, inv. no. 1980-1910.
Jug with cover, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, inv. no. 66.4.3.
Jug with cover, Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, inv. no. 1952.269.
Jug, David Collection, Copenhagen, inv. no. 11/1970.
Carafe, Museo Civico, Bologna, inv. no. 1303.
Bottle, British Museum, London, inv. no. 78.12.30.519.
Fragmentary bottle, British Museum, London, inv. no. G.1983.118.
Hanap, Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, inv. no. 58-1911.
Tondino, Kier Collection, London.
Tondino, ex-collection Lady Barlow, Cambridge, sold at Bonham’s, 16 October 2003, lot 228.
Tondino, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, inv. no. X.3274.
Tondino, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lyon, inv. no. D 167.
Tile fragments, Museum fur Islamische Kunst, Berlin, inv. no. 5614.
Lot 114. An Iznik polychrome pottery dish, Turkey, second half 16th century; 28.6cm. diam. Lot Sold 6,985 GBP (Estimate 8,000 - 12,000 GBP). © Sotheby's
of shallow rounded form, decorated in underglaze dark green, cobalt-blue and bold red with black outlines, decorated with tulips, carnations and stylised flower heads, the rim with wave and scroll border, paired tulips and rosettes to underside, one drill hole to foot.
Provenance: Bonhams, London, 24 April 1997, lot 321.
Note: Wave borders appeared on Iznik wares in the 1550s and were one of the rare ornaments of the period that remained in use until the end of Iznik production. The thin stems and leafy tuft with swarming roots on the present lot are characteristic of 1560s dishes. A similar example was sold in these rooms, 24 October 2018, lot 190.
Lot 115. An Iznik polychrome pottery tile, Turkey, circa 1575; 24.4 by 16.4cm. Lot Sold 19,050 GBP (Estimate 8,000 - 12,000 GBP). © Sotheby's
of rectangular form, painted cobalt blue, turquoise, viridian green, relief red and outlined in black, the upper register decorated with scrolling cloud-bands entwined with foliate vines issuing rosettes and lotus palmettes, the lower register with an arcade of major and minor palmettes
Provenance: Ex-private collection, Sweden, 1970s.
Acquired by the present owner in the early 1990s.
Note: Tiles with similar stylisation of the cloud-bands are seen on the mausoleum of Murad III in Istanbul, circa 1600 (Denny 2015, p.112) and the arcade of major and minor composite palmettes echo the decoration around the dome of the Mosque of Sokullu Mehmed Pasha, circa 1572 (ibid., p.105).
Sotheby's. Arts of the Islamic World and India, including Fine Rugs and Carpets, London, 26 April 2023


















