A LARGE EARLY ISLAMIC SILK LAMPAS PANEL
A LARGE EARLY ISLAMIC SILK LAMPAS PANEL

IRAN OR CENTRAL ASIA, CIRCA 8TH CENTURY

细节
A LARGE EARLY ISLAMIC SILK LAMPAS PANEL
IRAN OR CENTRAL ASIA, CIRCA 8TH CENTURY
Of rectangular form, the maroon silk ground woven with repeating roundels composed of interlocking blue, green and gold floral blooms and containing confronted cockerels with curved tail feathers perched on palmettes, roundels alternated with smaller cusped roundels containing eight-pointed stars, a vertical seam through the textile
55 5/8 x 28½in. (141.2 x 72.4cm.) at largest
来源
Formerly Asian private collection since early 1990s

荣誉呈献

Andrew Butler-Wheelhouse
Andrew Butler-Wheelhouse

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拍品专文

The more usual pearl roundel border has evolved on this textile into a more decorative ensemble of petals and flower buds. The border and the depiction of the birds standing on palmettes allows this to be classified into a specific group of red ground early Islamic textiles. Further examples from this same group have been excavated with accompanying archaeological evidence to affirm their dating to the second half of the 8th or early 9th Century, (Feng Zhao, Treasures in Silk, Hong Kong, 1999, pp. 97-100). The geometric stellar motif contained inside the smaller roundel on this textile illustrates clear parallels with Islamic geometric forms which had been largely absent from earlier silks from the region. For a further discussion on the depiction of Sasanian ritual animals on textiles see lots YG882 21 and 22
Two further similar red ground post-Sasanain textiles were sold recently in these Rooms, 6 October 2011 lots 6 and 7, one of which had a carbon date test confirming with a 95.4 confidence that it dated to between 660 to 870 AD.