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Mina'i ware

Mina'i ware is a type of Persian pottery, or Islamic pottery developed in Kashan, Iran, in the decades leading up to the Mongol invasion of Persia in 1219, after which production ceased.[2] It has been described as "probably the most luxurious of all types of ceramic ware produced in the eastern Islamic lands during the medieval period".[3] The ceramic body of white-ish fritware or stonepaste is fully decorated with detailed paintings using several colours, usually including figures.[4]

Bowl with couple in a garden, around 1200. In this type of scene, the figures are rather larger than in other common subjects. Diameter 18.8 cm.[1]
Side view of the same bowl

It is significant as the first pottery to use overglaze enamels,[5] painted over the ceramic glaze fixed by a main glost firing; after painting the wares were given a second firing at a lower temperature. "Mina'i" (Persian: مینایی), a term only used for these wares much later, means "enamelled" in the Persian language.[6] The technique is also known as haft-rang, "seven colours" in Persian. This was the term used by the near-contemporary writer Abu al-Qasim Kasani, who had a pottery background.[7] This technique much later became the standard method of decorating the best European and Chinese porcelain, though it is not clear that there was a connection between this and the earlier Persian use of the technique. As in other periods and regions when overglaze enamels were used, the purpose of the technique was to expand the range of colours available to painters beyond the very limited group that could withstand the temperature required for the main firing of the body and glaze,[8] which in the case of these wares was about 950 °C.[9]

The period also introduced underglaze decoration to Persian pottery, around 1200,[10] and later mina'i pieces often combine both underglaze and overglaze decoration; the former may also be described as inglaze. Most pieces are dated imprecisely as, for example, "late 12th or early 13th century", but the few inscribed dates begin in the 1170s and end in 1219. Gilded pieces are often dated to around or after 1200. It is assumed that the style and subjects in the painting of mina'i ware were drawn from contemporary Persian manuscript painting and wall painting. It is known these existed, but no illustrated manuscripts or murals from the period before the Mongol conquest have survived, leaving the painting on the pottery as the best evidence of that style.[11]

Most pieces are bowls, cups, and a range of pouring vessels: ewers, jars, and jugs, only a handful very large. There are some pieces considered to be begging bowls, or using the shape associated with that function. Tiles are rare, and were perhaps designed as centrepieces surrounded by other materials, rather than placed in groups.[12] Mina'i tiles found in situ by archaeologists at Konya in modern Turkey were probably made there by itinerant Persian artists.[13] Sherds of mina'i ware have been excavated from "most urban sites in Iran and Central Asia" occupied during the period,[14] although most writers believe that nearly all production was in Kashan.[15]

Wares and dates edit

 
The earliest Mina'i bowl dated and signed by Abu Zayd al-Kashani in 1187 CE, just a few years before the fall of the Seljuk Empire in 1194. Iran.[16]

Black and cobalt blue may be in underglaze, with the wider range of colours in overglaze. As well as the usual white glaze, a coloured turquoise glaze is used in some pieces, giving a background to the overglaze painting. The outlines of the designs were done in black, with thin brushed lines.[17] Some mina'i pieces, usually thought to be from the later part of the period, use gilding, sometimes on patterns on the body that are raised up (probably using slip).[18] A few pieces combine lustre and mina'i painting in different zones.[19]

 
A Mina'i bowl, dated 1187 CE, a few years before the end of the Seljuk Empire in 1194. Scene of poetic recitation, with poetic verses incribed on the rim: "If the beloved leaves me, what am I to do? If s/he does not see the wisdom of our union, what am I to do?". Kashan, Iran. Los Angeles County Museum of Art.[20]

A small proportion (smaller than for lustreware) of pieces are signed and dated. Watson records ten such pieces, signed by three potters, with dates from 1178 to 1219. For Kashan lustreware the equivalent numbers are "over ninety" pieces, "perhaps six" potters, and dates from 1178 and 1226; there are then no dated pieces until 1261, suggesting the long-lasting disruption of the Mongol invasion.[21] That the two techniques might be produced by the same workshop is demonstrated by the Persian potter from this period with the most signed pieces, Abū Zayd ibn Muḥammad ibn Abī Zayd from Kashan, with 15 pieces. The earliest date on these is 1187,[22] on a mina'i bowl, but most pieces are lustreware, where dates extend to 1219.[23]

Under the Mongol Ilkhanids, overglaze painting continued in a rare new style called lajvardina wares, but these featured patterns rather than figures, with deep underglaze blue and gold leaf fixed in a second firing. The Persian name refers to lapis lazuli, though the usual cobalt blue was used.[24]

The study of mina'i ware is complicated by a good deal of excessive restoration and embellishment by dealers after the pieces attracted the attention of collectors, mostly in the West, from the late 19th century onwards.[25] For example, the catalogue entry for a bowl in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, from the Robert Lehman collection, records that "Extensive restoration has interfered with the inscription in certain areas, and nearly every part of the interior decoration has been subjected to heavy overpainting".[26]

Iconography edit

 
Beaker illustrating the story of Bijan and Manijeh from the Shahnama, Freer Gallery of Art.[27]

There are a few pieces with entirely abstract or geometric patterns or designs, but in the great majority of pieces there are figures, usually a number of small ones. Images of enthroned rulers, flanked by attendants, are common, as are figures of riders, who are often engaged in princely pursuits such as hunting and falconry. The "inscrutable rulers were probably never meant to represent particular rulers or their consorts", any more than the loving couples.[28] Similar motifs abound in other media; it is not clear to what extent they reflected the actual lifestyle of the owners or users of pieces; probably these "may indicate a general middle-class aspiration or identification" with the princely lifestyle.[29]

Peacocks may accompany princes, and there are often numbers of the Islamic version of the sphinx, especially around the outer border of flat open shapes. Scenes and figures from the Persian literary classics can be seen. The outside of raised bowls is usually not painted with images, although some have relatively simple floral or abstract decoration, but inscriptions of text running round the piece are common.[30] Many of these are from standard works of Persian poetry, possibly taken from anthologies that would have been available to the potters.[31]

 
Low bowl depicting a battle scene in Khalkhal, Iran. This is the largest known survival in the mina'i technique. Kashan, early 13th century. Freer Gallery of Art.[32][33]

A well-known low bowl in the Freer Gallery of Art (reconstructed from fragments) is exceptional, both in its size of 47.8 cm across, and in its design; it is the largest known plate in the mina'i technique.[34] There are a very large number of figures, all at the small size typical of other, smaller, pieces. They are engaged in a battle, probably a specific event of the period when "an Assassin stronghold was attacked by a petty Iranian prince and his troops". The eight principal figures on the victorious side are named in inscriptions next to them,[35] with Turkish names, and a siege engine and an elephant appear in the scene.[36] This bowl is dated to the early 13th century.[37]

This piece may well follow a depiction in a wall painting or other medium,[38] as may a "celebrated" beaker, now also in the Freer, which is the fullest example of an iconographic scheme taken from the Persian literary classics, in this case the Shahnameh. Here a whole story is told in a number of scenes in three registers running round the cup.[39]

Context edit

 
Inscribed exterior, reading "Triumph and lasting life to its owner — triumph and triumphant victory [repeated twice] and lasting life . . . perpetual and increasing prosperity and triumphant victory and lasting glory to its owner" (who is not named).[40]

Mina'i ware began to be made when Persia was in theory part of the Seljuk Empire, whose ruling dynasty and top elite were ethnically Turkish. But Persia was ruled by the Khwarazmian dynasty, also of Turkic origin, initially as vassals of the Seljuk, until in 1190 they severed these ties and ruled independently until the devastating Mongol conquest beginning in 1219. Although generally described as belonging to the "Seljuk period", some of the "most iconic" productions of stonepaste vessels can actually be attributed to the Khwarazmian rulers, after the end of Seljuk domination.[41]

The fifty years from 1150 saw great developments in Iranian ceramics. Firstly the fritware body and the glazes used on it were greatly improved, which allowed thinner walls and some of the translucency of Chinese porcelain, which was already imported into Persia, and represented the main competition for local fine wares. This "white ware" body was used for a variety of styles of decoration, all showing great advances in sophistication. Apart from Mina'i ware, the most luxurious was lustreware, which also required a light second firing; the earliest dated Persian piece is from 1179. The main colour of lustre paint used was gold; this needs to be distinguished from the overglaze application of gold leaf found in many later mina'i pieces.[42]

 
Jug with turquoise-coloured glaze

The "white ware" body was, however, not able to match Chinese porcelain in strength, and though historians praise the delicacy and lightness of Mina'i and lustred pieces, they are dubious about the practicality of these expensive wares, because of their fragility. Ceramics were not grave goods in Islamic societies, and almost all the survivals that have come down to us were broken, and probably mostly discarded after breakage. The majority of find sites are unrecorded; some pieces were buried unbroken, perhaps to hide them from looters.[43] However, there are also modern forgeries, and Michelsen and Olafsdotter note that "one must now be rather suspicious of any piece of mina'i, especially those that appear to be whole and unscathed".[44] Their extended technical analysis of a large and well-known dish now in the Museum of Islamic Art, Doha, Qatar, finds that much of the dish is made up of fragments originally from elsewhere (quite possibly also medieval) that have been reshaped to fit the dish, and then painted to match the decorative scheme.[45]

Though luxurious considered as pottery, the new Persian lustre and mina'i wares may have represented a cost-saving alternative for vessels using precious metals, either in solid form or as inlays on brass or bronze. As early as 1100 the economy of the Seljuk empire was weakening and silver in short supply.[46]

Lustreware was not a new technique; it had been used in the Arabic-speaking world for some centuries,[47] but was new to Persia. Its spread there has been connected to a flight of potters from Fustat (Cairo) during the turbulent collapse of Fatimid Egypt around 1160. Since the shapes in Persian lustreware are traditional local ones, it is likely the refugee artisans were mostly pottery painters rather than potters. Lustreware painting styles can be connected to earlier ones in Arabic-speaking lands in a way that is not possible for mina'i ware, whose style, and possibly artists, are normally taken to be drawn from manuscript painting.[48] It is even more clear to scholars that lustreware production was concentrated in Kashan than it is for mina'i ware.[49]

The mina'i style was soon being copied in other parts of the Seljuk empire, especially Syria. But the makers did not know the secrets of the overglaze technique and used underglaze painting instead.[50] The secrets of lustreware at least may have been held by a small number of families in Kashan.[51] The later Persian mīnākārī style was and is enamel on a metal base, practiced from the 18th century to the present.[52]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Canby, # 22
  2. ^ Komaroff, 4; Michelsen and Olafsdotter, 76; Fitzwilliam Museum: "Mina’i, meaning ‘enamelled’ ware, is one of the glories of Islamic ceramics, and was a speciality of the renowned ceramics centre of Kashan in Iran during the decades of the late 12th and early 13th centuries preceding the Mongol invasions". Grube mentions a bowl in the Victoria and Albert Museum dated 1242, but this is not mentioned by later writers.
  3. ^ Yale, 175
  4. ^ Yale, 175
  5. ^ Needham, 618; Watson (2012), 326; Watson (1985), 24; Gulbenkian, 54
  6. ^ Suleman, 144
  7. ^ Persian Tiles, p.3, 1993, by Metropolitan Museum of Art, Stefano Carboni, Tomoko Masuya; Morgan; Abu al-Qasim Kasani's work is dated 1301, and he says that the mina'i technique was not produced in his time. He himself seems to have moved to more genteel occupations around the Ilkhanid court.
  8. ^ Yale, 175
  9. ^ Caiger-Smith, 57
  10. ^ Watson (2012), 326
  11. ^ Suleman, 144; Grube
  12. ^ Canby, #s 19, 20
  13. ^ Canby, 82–83, 315, note 12 on #20
  14. ^ Canby, 318, note 6 on #37
  15. ^ Watson (2012), 329; Yale, 177–178
  16. ^ "Metropolitan Museum of Art". www.metmuseum.org.
  17. ^ Osborne, 144
  18. ^ "Faceted Basin, Mina'i ("enameled") ware, early 13th century", with Catalogue entry from Linda Komaroff. The Robert Lehman Collection. Decorative Arts, Volume XV. Wolfram Koeppe, et al. The Metropolitan Museum of Art in association with Princeton University Press, 2012, p. 355.
  19. ^ Yale, 175; one illustrated below; another example
  20. ^ "Bowl, LACMA Collections". collections.lacma.org.
  21. ^ (2012), 328
  22. ^ "Metropolitan Museum of Art". www.metmuseum.org.
  23. ^ "Abu Zayd." In Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online, (accessed June 2, 2020; subscription required).
  24. ^ Encyclopaedia Iranica, "Il-Khanids iv; Ceramics"; "Covered Jar (Albarello)" Metropolitan Museum (see catalogue entry); Watson (2012), 336; "Three Tiles with 'Lajvardina' Glaze", Metropolitan Museum; Osborne, 144
  25. ^ Watson (2012), 336, note 43; Michelsen and Olafsdotter, 66–69
  26. ^ Catalogue entry from Linda Komaroff, in The Robert Lehman Collection. Decorative Arts, Volume XV. Wolfram Koeppe, et al. The Metropolitan Museum of Art in association with Princeton University Press, 2012, p. 356. The outside of this lobed bowl is illustrated here.
  27. ^ Yale, 175–176; Michelsen and Olafsdotter, 72–76; other side
  28. ^ Caiger-Smith, 73
  29. ^ Watson (2012), 328 quoted; Yale, 175; Canby, 72–73, #37, #71
  30. ^ Yale, 175; Canby, 72–73, #37
  31. ^ Canby, 318, note 5 on #39
  32. ^ Holod, Renata (1 January 2012). "The Freer Gallery's Siege Scene Plate". Ars Orientalis.
  33. ^ "Bowl". Smithsonian's National Museum of Asian Art.
  34. ^ Holod, 195
  35. ^ Holod, 196
  36. ^ Holod, throughout; Yale, 175 quoted
  37. ^ "Bowl". Smithsonian's National Museum of Asian Art.
  38. ^ Holod, 209; Grube
  39. ^ Michelsen and Olafsdotter, 72–76, 72 quoted
  40. ^ Catalogue entry from Metropolitan Museum. Inside of the same bowl
  41. ^ "While stonepaste vessels are often attributed to the Seljuq period, some of the most iconic productions in the medium took place after this dynasty lost control over its eastern territories to other Central Asian Turkic groups, such as the Khwarezm-Shahis" in Rugiadi, Martina. "Ceramic Technology in the Seljuq Period: Stonepaste in Syria and Iran in the Twelfth and Early Thirteenth Centuries". www.metmuseum.org. Metropolitan Museum of Art (2021). Retrieved 1 February 2023.
  42. ^ Osborne, 144–145; Caiger-Smith, 57–65; (2012), 325–326
  43. ^ Savage, 86–87; Caiger-Smith, 65–66; Michelsen and Olafsdotter, throughout, especially 76–86, give an account of a technical examination by various methods of one important piece, made up of many fragments.
  44. ^ Michelsen and Olafsdotter, 69, note 6
  45. ^ Michelsen and Olafsdotter, 76–86
  46. ^ Caiger-Smith, 59
  47. ^ Caiger-Smith, 20–55
  48. ^ Caiger-Smith, 57–59
  49. ^ Caiger-Smith, 57–59; Yale, 178; Watson (2012), 328–329
  50. ^ Pitcher in the National Museum of Damascus, Discover Islamic art
  51. ^ Caiger-Smith, 59
  52. ^ Borjian, Habib (2007), Isfahan xiii. CRAFTS, Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. XIV, Fasc. 1, pp.48–55
  53. ^ Canby, # 27
  54. ^ "Faceted Basin, Mina'i ("enameled") ware Iranian". The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

References edit

  • Caiger-Smith, Alan, Lustre Pottery: Technique, Tradition and Innovation in Islam and the Western World (Faber and Faber, 1985) ISBN 0571135072
  • Canby, Sheila R., and others ( Deniz Beyazit, Martina Rugiadi, A. C. S. Peacock), Court and Cosmos: The Great Age of the Seljuqs, 2016, Metropolitan Museum of Art, google books
  • Grube, Ernst J., “CERAMICS xiv. The Islamic Period, 11th–15th centuries,”, Encyclopaedia Iranica, V/3
  • "Gulbenkian", Only the Best: Masterpieces of the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon, eds. Katharine Baetjer, James David Draper, 1999, Metropolitan Museum of Art, ISBN 0870999265, 9780870999260, google books
  • Holod, Renata, "Event and Memory: The Freer Gallery's Siege Scene Plate", Ars Orientalis, vol. 42, 2012, pp. 194–219. JSTOR, JSTOR, Accessed 10 June 2020.
  • Komaroff, Linda, The Legacy of Genghis Khan: Courtly Art and Culture in Western Asia, 1256–1353, 2002, Metropolitan Museum of Art, ISBN 1588390713, 9781588390714, google books
  • Michelsen, Leslee Katrina and Olafsdotter, Johanna, "Telling Tales: Investigating a Mīnāʾī Bowl", chapter 4 in Envisioning Islamic Art and Architecture: Essays in Honor of Renata Holod, ed. David J. Roxburgh, 2014, BRILL, ISBN 9004280286, 9789004280281
  • Morgan, Peter, "Il-khanids, iv, Ceramics; Production", Encyclopaedia Iranica
  • Needham, Joseph (ed), Science and Civilisation in China, Volume 5, Part 12, 2004, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521838339, 9780521838337, google books
  • Osborne, Harold (ed), The Oxford Companion to the Decorative Arts, 1975, OUP, ISBN 0198661134
  • Savage, George, Pottery Through the Ages, Penguin, 1959
  • Suleman, Fahmida, "Ceramics", in Medieval Islamic Civilization: an Encyclopedia, Vol. 1, 2006, Taylor & Francis, ISBN 0415966914, 9780415966917, google books
  • "Yale": Richard Ettinghausen, Oleg Grabar and Marilyn Jenkins-Madina, 2001, Islamic Art and Architecture: 650–1250, Yale University Press, ISBN 9780300088694
  • Watson, Oliver (1985), Persian Lustre Ware, 1985, Faber & Faber, ISBN 0571132359, PDF www.academia.edu
  • Watson, Oliver (2012), "Pottery under the Mongols" in Beyond the Legacy of Genghis Khan, 2012, BRILL, Ed. Linda Komaroff, ISBN 9004243402, 9789004243408, google books

External links edit

  • McClary, Richard Piran (2021). "Mīnāʾī ware". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. ISSN 1873-9830.
  • "SCHOLAR FAVORITES: 12th–13th Century Mina’i Enamel Ware with Dr. Morris Rossabi", Video (7:18) via YouTube, from the Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture & Design

mina, ware, type, persian, pottery, islamic, pottery, developed, kashan, iran, decades, leading, mongol, invasion, persia, 1219, after, which, production, ceased, been, described, probably, most, luxurious, types, ceramic, ware, produced, eastern, islamic, lan. Mina i ware is a type of Persian pottery or Islamic pottery developed in Kashan Iran in the decades leading up to the Mongol invasion of Persia in 1219 after which production ceased 2 It has been described as probably the most luxurious of all types of ceramic ware produced in the eastern Islamic lands during the medieval period 3 The ceramic body of white ish fritware or stonepaste is fully decorated with detailed paintings using several colours usually including figures 4 Bowl with couple in a garden around 1200 In this type of scene the figures are rather larger than in other common subjects Diameter 18 8 cm 1 Side view of the same bowlIt is significant as the first pottery to use overglaze enamels 5 painted over the ceramic glaze fixed by a main glost firing after painting the wares were given a second firing at a lower temperature Mina i Persian مینایی a term only used for these wares much later means enamelled in the Persian language 6 The technique is also known as haft rang seven colours in Persian This was the term used by the near contemporary writer Abu al Qasim Kasani who had a pottery background 7 This technique much later became the standard method of decorating the best European and Chinese porcelain though it is not clear that there was a connection between this and the earlier Persian use of the technique As in other periods and regions when overglaze enamels were used the purpose of the technique was to expand the range of colours available to painters beyond the very limited group that could withstand the temperature required for the main firing of the body and glaze 8 which in the case of these wares was about 950 C 9 The period also introduced underglaze decoration to Persian pottery around 1200 10 and later mina i pieces often combine both underglaze and overglaze decoration the former may also be described as inglaze Most pieces are dated imprecisely as for example late 12th or early 13th century but the few inscribed dates begin in the 1170s and end in 1219 Gilded pieces are often dated to around or after 1200 It is assumed that the style and subjects in the painting of mina i ware were drawn from contemporary Persian manuscript painting and wall painting It is known these existed but no illustrated manuscripts or murals from the period before the Mongol conquest have survived leaving the painting on the pottery as the best evidence of that style 11 Most pieces are bowls cups and a range of pouring vessels ewers jars and jugs only a handful very large There are some pieces considered to be begging bowls or using the shape associated with that function Tiles are rare and were perhaps designed as centrepieces surrounded by other materials rather than placed in groups 12 Mina i tiles found in situ by archaeologists at Konya in modern Turkey were probably made there by itinerant Persian artists 13 Sherds of mina i ware have been excavated from most urban sites in Iran and Central Asia occupied during the period 14 although most writers believe that nearly all production was in Kashan 15 Contents 1 Wares and dates 2 Iconography 3 Context 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksWares and dates edit nbsp The earliest Mina i bowl dated and signed by Abu Zayd al Kashani in 1187 CE just a few years before the fall of the Seljuk Empire in 1194 Iran 16 Black and cobalt blue may be in underglaze with the wider range of colours in overglaze As well as the usual white glaze a coloured turquoise glaze is used in some pieces giving a background to the overglaze painting The outlines of the designs were done in black with thin brushed lines 17 Some mina i pieces usually thought to be from the later part of the period use gilding sometimes on patterns on the body that are raised up probably using slip 18 A few pieces combine lustre and mina i painting in different zones 19 nbsp A Mina i bowl dated 1187 CE a few years before the end of the Seljuk Empire in 1194 Scene of poetic recitation with poetic verses incribed on the rim If the beloved leaves me what am I to do If s he does not see the wisdom of our union what am I to do Kashan Iran Los Angeles County Museum of Art 20 A small proportion smaller than for lustreware of pieces are signed and dated Watson records ten such pieces signed by three potters with dates from 1178 to 1219 For Kashan lustreware the equivalent numbers are over ninety pieces perhaps six potters and dates from 1178 and 1226 there are then no dated pieces until 1261 suggesting the long lasting disruption of the Mongol invasion 21 That the two techniques might be produced by the same workshop is demonstrated by the Persian potter from this period with the most signed pieces Abu Zayd ibn Muḥammad ibn Abi Zayd from Kashan with 15 pieces The earliest date on these is 1187 22 on a mina i bowl but most pieces are lustreware where dates extend to 1219 23 Under the Mongol Ilkhanids overglaze painting continued in a rare new style called lajvardina wares but these featured patterns rather than figures with deep underglaze blue and gold leaf fixed in a second firing The Persian name refers to lapis lazuli though the usual cobalt blue was used 24 The study of mina i ware is complicated by a good deal of excessive restoration and embellishment by dealers after the pieces attracted the attention of collectors mostly in the West from the late 19th century onwards 25 For example the catalogue entry for a bowl in the Metropolitan Museum of Art from the Robert Lehman collection records that Extensive restoration has interfered with the inscription in certain areas and nearly every part of the interior decoration has been subjected to heavy overpainting 26 Iconography edit nbsp Beaker illustrating the story of Bijan and Manijeh from the Shahnama Freer Gallery of Art 27 There are a few pieces with entirely abstract or geometric patterns or designs but in the great majority of pieces there are figures usually a number of small ones Images of enthroned rulers flanked by attendants are common as are figures of riders who are often engaged in princely pursuits such as hunting and falconry The inscrutable rulers were probably never meant to represent particular rulers or their consorts any more than the loving couples 28 Similar motifs abound in other media it is not clear to what extent they reflected the actual lifestyle of the owners or users of pieces probably these may indicate a general middle class aspiration or identification with the princely lifestyle 29 Peacocks may accompany princes and there are often numbers of the Islamic version of the sphinx especially around the outer border of flat open shapes Scenes and figures from the Persian literary classics can be seen The outside of raised bowls is usually not painted with images although some have relatively simple floral or abstract decoration but inscriptions of text running round the piece are common 30 Many of these are from standard works of Persian poetry possibly taken from anthologies that would have been available to the potters 31 nbsp Low bowl depicting a battle scene in Khalkhal Iran This is the largest known survival in the mina i technique Kashan early 13th century Freer Gallery of Art 32 33 A well known low bowl in the Freer Gallery of Art reconstructed from fragments is exceptional both in its size of 47 8 cm across and in its design it is the largest known plate in the mina i technique 34 There are a very large number of figures all at the small size typical of other smaller pieces They are engaged in a battle probably a specific event of the period when an Assassin stronghold was attacked by a petty Iranian prince and his troops The eight principal figures on the victorious side are named in inscriptions next to them 35 with Turkish names and a siege engine and an elephant appear in the scene 36 This bowl is dated to the early 13th century 37 This piece may well follow a depiction in a wall painting or other medium 38 as may a celebrated beaker now also in the Freer which is the fullest example of an iconographic scheme taken from the Persian literary classics in this case the Shahnameh Here a whole story is told in a number of scenes in three registers running round the cup 39 Context edit nbsp Inscribed exterior reading Triumph and lasting life to its owner triumph and triumphant victory repeated twice and lasting life perpetual and increasing prosperity and triumphant victory and lasting glory to its owner who is not named 40 Mina i ware began to be made when Persia was in theory part of the Seljuk Empire whose ruling dynasty and top elite were ethnically Turkish But Persia was ruled by the Khwarazmian dynasty also of Turkic origin initially as vassals of the Seljuk until in 1190 they severed these ties and ruled independently until the devastating Mongol conquest beginning in 1219 Although generally described as belonging to the Seljuk period some of the most iconic productions of stonepaste vessels can actually be attributed to the Khwarazmian rulers after the end of Seljuk domination 41 The fifty years from 1150 saw great developments in Iranian ceramics Firstly the fritware body and the glazes used on it were greatly improved which allowed thinner walls and some of the translucency of Chinese porcelain which was already imported into Persia and represented the main competition for local fine wares This white ware body was used for a variety of styles of decoration all showing great advances in sophistication Apart from Mina i ware the most luxurious was lustreware which also required a light second firing the earliest dated Persian piece is from 1179 The main colour of lustre paint used was gold this needs to be distinguished from the overglaze application of gold leaf found in many later mina i pieces 42 nbsp Jug with turquoise coloured glazeThe white ware body was however not able to match Chinese porcelain in strength and though historians praise the delicacy and lightness of Mina i and lustred pieces they are dubious about the practicality of these expensive wares because of their fragility Ceramics were not grave goods in Islamic societies and almost all the survivals that have come down to us were broken and probably mostly discarded after breakage The majority of find sites are unrecorded some pieces were buried unbroken perhaps to hide them from looters 43 However there are also modern forgeries and Michelsen and Olafsdotter note that one must now be rather suspicious of any piece of mina i especially those that appear to be whole and unscathed 44 Their extended technical analysis of a large and well known dish now in the Museum of Islamic Art Doha Qatar finds that much of the dish is made up of fragments originally from elsewhere quite possibly also medieval that have been reshaped to fit the dish and then painted to match the decorative scheme 45 Though luxurious considered as pottery the new Persian lustre and mina i wares may have represented a cost saving alternative for vessels using precious metals either in solid form or as inlays on brass or bronze As early as 1100 the economy of the Seljuk empire was weakening and silver in short supply 46 Lustreware was not a new technique it had been used in the Arabic speaking world for some centuries 47 but was new to Persia Its spread there has been connected to a flight of potters from Fustat Cairo during the turbulent collapse of Fatimid Egypt around 1160 Since the shapes in Persian lustreware are traditional local ones it is likely the refugee artisans were mostly pottery painters rather than potters Lustreware painting styles can be connected to earlier ones in Arabic speaking lands in a way that is not possible for mina i ware whose style and possibly artists are normally taken to be drawn from manuscript painting 48 It is even more clear to scholars that lustreware production was concentrated in Kashan than it is for mina i ware 49 The mina i style was soon being copied in other parts of the Seljuk empire especially Syria But the makers did not know the secrets of the overglaze technique and used underglaze painting instead 50 The secrets of lustreware at least may have been held by a small number of families in Kashan 51 The later Persian minakari style was and is enamel on a metal base practiced from the 18th century to the present 52 nbsp Bowl with ruler and sphinxes nbsp Enthroned figure flanked by attendants 53 nbsp Bahram Gur hunting with Azadeh 3 5 8 x 8 3 8in 9 2 x 21 3cm nbsp Rider in centre with sphinxes in a band nbsp Jug with figures combining lustre painting top and mina i 22 5 12 8 cm 8 8 5 in nbsp Beggar s bowl with sphinxes amp seated figures colours include gilding nbsp Beaker with seated figures nbsp Couple nbsp Jug with mounted falconer nbsp Bowl with abstract pattern 6 1 4 in 15 9 cm across nbsp Star tile with Rustam and dragon nbsp Faceted Basin with gilding over the pattern raised in slip After 1200 54 nbsp Albarello jar in the succeeding lajvardina style after 1250 nbsp Ewer with gold lustre 1190 1210Notes edit Canby 22 Komaroff 4 Michelsen and Olafsdotter 76 Fitzwilliam Museum Mina i meaning enamelled ware is one of the glories of Islamic ceramics and was a speciality of the renowned ceramics centre of Kashan in Iran during the decades of the late 12th and early 13th centuries preceding the Mongol invasions Grube mentions a bowl in the Victoria and Albert Museum dated 1242 but this is not mentioned by later writers Yale 175 Yale 175 Needham 618 Watson 2012 326 Watson 1985 24 Gulbenkian 54 Suleman 144 Persian Tiles p 3 1993 by Metropolitan Museum of Art Stefano Carboni Tomoko Masuya Morgan Abu al Qasim Kasani s work is dated 1301 and he says that the mina i technique was not produced in his time He himself seems to have moved to more genteel occupations around the Ilkhanid court Yale 175 Caiger Smith 57 Watson 2012 326 Suleman 144 Grube Canby s 19 20 Canby 82 83 315 note 12 on 20 Canby 318 note 6 on 37 Watson 2012 329 Yale 177 178 Metropolitan Museum of Art www metmuseum org Osborne 144 Faceted Basin Mina i enameled ware early 13th century with Catalogue entry from Linda Komaroff The Robert Lehman Collection Decorative Arts Volume XV Wolfram Koeppe et al The Metropolitan Museum of Art in association with Princeton University Press 2012 p 355 Yale 175 one illustrated below another example Bowl LACMA Collections collections lacma org 2012 328 Metropolitan Museum of Art www metmuseum org Abu Zayd In Grove Art Online Oxford Art Online accessed June 2 2020 subscription required Encyclopaedia Iranica Il Khanids iv Ceramics Covered Jar Albarello Metropolitan Museum see catalogue entry Watson 2012 336 Three Tiles with Lajvardina Glaze Metropolitan Museum Osborne 144 Watson 2012 336 note 43 Michelsen and Olafsdotter 66 69 Catalogue entry from Linda Komaroff in The Robert Lehman Collection Decorative Arts Volume XV Wolfram Koeppe et al The Metropolitan Museum of Art in association with Princeton University Press 2012 p 356 The outside of this lobed bowl is illustrated here Yale 175 176 Michelsen and Olafsdotter 72 76 other side Caiger Smith 73 Watson 2012 328 quoted Yale 175 Canby 72 73 37 71 Yale 175 Canby 72 73 37 Canby 318 note 5 on 39 Holod Renata 1 January 2012 The Freer Gallery s Siege Scene Plate Ars Orientalis Bowl Smithsonian s National Museum of Asian Art Holod 195 Holod 196 Holod throughout Yale 175 quoted Bowl Smithsonian s National Museum of Asian Art Holod 209 Grube Michelsen and Olafsdotter 72 76 72 quoted Catalogue entry from Metropolitan Museum Inside of the same bowl While stonepaste vessels are often attributed to the Seljuq period some of the most iconic productions in the medium took place after this dynasty lost control over its eastern territories to other Central Asian Turkic groups such as the Khwarezm Shahis in Rugiadi Martina Ceramic Technology in the Seljuq Period Stonepaste in Syria and Iran in the Twelfth and Early Thirteenth Centuries www metmuseum org Metropolitan Museum of Art 2021 Retrieved 1 February 2023 Osborne 144 145 Caiger Smith 57 65 2012 325 326 Savage 86 87 Caiger Smith 65 66 Michelsen and Olafsdotter throughout especially 76 86 give an account of a technical examination by various methods of one important piece made up of many fragments Michelsen and Olafsdotter 69 note 6 Michelsen and Olafsdotter 76 86 Caiger Smith 59 Caiger Smith 20 55 Caiger Smith 57 59 Caiger Smith 57 59 Yale 178 Watson 2012 328 329 Pitcher in the National Museum of Damascus Discover Islamic art Caiger Smith 59 Borjian Habib 2007 Isfahan xiii CRAFTS Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol XIV Fasc 1 pp 48 55 Canby 27 Faceted Basin Mina i enameled ware Iranian The Metropolitan Museum of Art References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mina i ware Caiger Smith Alan Lustre Pottery Technique Tradition and Innovation in Islam and the Western World Faber and Faber 1985 ISBN 0571135072 Canby Sheila R and others Deniz Beyazit Martina Rugiadi A C S Peacock Court and Cosmos The Great Age of the Seljuqs 2016 Metropolitan Museum of Art google books Grube Ernst J CERAMICS xiv The Islamic Period 11th 15th centuries Encyclopaedia Iranica V 3 Gulbenkian Only the Best Masterpieces of the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum Lisbon eds Katharine Baetjer James David Draper 1999 Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 0870999265 9780870999260 google books Holod Renata Event and Memory The Freer Gallery s Siege Scene Plate Ars Orientalis vol 42 2012 pp 194 219 JSTOR JSTOR Accessed 10 June 2020 Komaroff Linda The Legacy of Genghis Khan Courtly Art and Culture in Western Asia 1256 1353 2002 Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 1588390713 9781588390714 google books Michelsen Leslee Katrina and Olafsdotter Johanna Telling Tales Investigating a Minaʾi Bowl chapter 4 in Envisioning Islamic Art and Architecture Essays in Honor of Renata Holod ed David J Roxburgh 2014 BRILL ISBN 9004280286 9789004280281 Morgan Peter Il khanids iv Ceramics Production Encyclopaedia Iranica Needham Joseph ed Science and Civilisation in China Volume 5 Part 12 2004 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521838339 9780521838337 google books Osborne Harold ed The Oxford Companion to the Decorative Arts 1975 OUP ISBN 0198661134 Savage George Pottery Through the Ages Penguin 1959 Suleman Fahmida Ceramics in Medieval Islamic Civilization an Encyclopedia Vol 1 2006 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0415966914 9780415966917 google books Yale Richard Ettinghausen Oleg Grabar and Marilyn Jenkins Madina 2001 Islamic Art and Architecture 650 1250 Yale University Press ISBN 9780300088694 Watson Oliver 1985 Persian Lustre Ware 1985 Faber amp Faber ISBN 0571132359 PDF www academia edu Watson Oliver 2012 Pottery under the Mongols in Beyond the Legacy of Genghis Khan 2012 BRILL Ed Linda Komaroff ISBN 9004243402 9789004243408 google booksExternal links editMcClary Richard Piran 2021 Minaʾi ware In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 3rd ed Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 SCHOLAR FAVORITES 12th 13th Century Mina i Enamel Ware with Dr Morris Rossabi Video 7 18 via YouTube from the Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art Culture amp Design Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mina 27i ware amp oldid 1180418116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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