27 Nov 2024
Wednesday 9 April 2014 - 14:32
Story Code : 91826

Qajar royal portrait leads sothebys arts of the Islamic world sale

Qajar royal portrait leads sothebys arts of the Islamic world sale
[caption id="attachment_91828" align="alignright" width="180"] Qajar royal portrait of Fath Ali Shah (detail)[/caption]
A magnificent and extremely rare life-size Qajar royal portrait ofFath Ali Shah, the pre-eminent ruler of the Qajar dynasty, is the highlight of theSothebysLondon April 9Arts of the Islamic Worldsale. The circa 1820 painting carries an estimate of 1,500,000-2,500,000.
One of just sixteen recorded and published large-scale portraits of Fath Ali Shah, only four of which four are present in Western museum collections, this portrait is an exemplary model of the extensive canon of life-size portraits commissioned by the monarch, according to Sothebys.

This particular portrait has been attributed toMihr Aliwho was one of the foremost Persian court painters from the beginning of Fath Ali Shahs reign. Such portraits were commissioned as a form of royal propaganda, immortalizing the rule of the monarch.

Other highlights of the sale include lot 94, an important collection of twenty-seven watercolor portraits of the Ottoman Sultans (estimate: 100,000-150,000); lot 100, an 11thcentury Fatimid rock crystal chess piece (estimate: 80,000-120,000); and lot 154, a rare 16thcentury Chinese monochrome blue porcelain ewer with gem-set tombak mounts (estimate: 80,000-120,000).

According toBenedict Carter, Head of Auction Sales, Middle East, This years spring sale offers opulent and luxurious objects befitting the worlds finest collections. The selection of Turkish works are especially notable, led by a rediscovered imperial Ottoman silver-gilt penbox and an astounding group of twenty-seven watercolour portraits of the Ottoman Sultans.

Additionally, following the success of our inaugural sale of Art of Imperial India last year, we are delighted to once again have sourced for sale a superb array of Indian jewellery, jade and silver. Ranging from an eleventh-century Fatimid chess piece to an eighteenth-century Ottoman metal-thread curtain of the Holy Kaba door, the sale reflects the remarkable scope of artistic production and craftsmanship in Islamic culture.

By Blouin Art Info

 

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