Prayer Book with Images in Ghubar Script in the Me…
Detail of a Prayer Book with Images in Ghubar Scri…
Ewer & Basin with Life Casts in the Metropolitan M…
Ewer & Basin with Life Casts in the Metropolitan M…
Encryption Device in the Metropolitan Museum of Ar…
Encryption Device in the Metropolitan Museum of Ar…
Model Operating 4 Hydraulic Pumps in the Metropoli…
Model Operating 4 Hydraulic Pumps in the Metropoli…
Alchemical Distilling Stove of Moritz in the Metro…
Alchemical Distilling Stove of Moritz in the Metro…
Alchemical Furnace of Augustus of Saxony in the Me…
Alchemical Furnace of Augustus of Saxony in the Me…
Alchemical Furnace of Augustus of Saxony in the Me…
Alchemical Furnace of Augustus of Saxony in the Me…
Bronze Statuette of Aphrodite in the Metropolitan…
Detail of a Bronze Statuette of Aphrodite in the M…
Marble Right Foot Wearing a Sandal in the Metropol…
Roman Marble Statue of a Woman in the Metropolitan…
Detail of a Roman Marble Statue of a Woman in the…
Terracotta Vessel in the Form of a Boar in the Met…
Terracotta Vessel in the Form of a Boar in the Met…
Timor Perpetual Calendar in the Museum of Modern A…
Timor Perpetual Calendar in the Museum of Modern A…
Isfandiyar's 4th Course from the Shahnama in the M…
Isfandiyar's 4th Course from the Shahnama in the M…
Detail of the Marble Column Statue of St. Hilary i…
Detail of the Marble Column Statue of St. Hilary i…
Marble Column Statue of St. Hilary in the Metropol…
Detail of the Mary Magdalene Statue in the Metropo…
Mary Magdalene Statue in the Metropolitan Museum o…
Detail of the Fight or Buy Bonds Poster in the Met…
Detail of the Fight or Buy Bonds Poster in the Met…
Fight or Buy Bonds Poster in the Metropolitan Muse…
Fight or Buy Bonds Poster in the Metropolitan Muse…
The Richmond Room in the Metropolitan Museum of Ar…
The Richmond Room in the Metropolitan Museum of Ar…
The Madrid Puteal in the Archaeological Museum of…
The Madrid Puteal in the Archaeological Museum of…
The Madrid Puteal in the Archaeological Museum of…
The Madrid Puteal in the Archaeological Museum of…
Sundial from Baelo Claudia in the Archaeological M…
Sundial from Baelo Claudia in the Archaeological M…
Bronze Lamp with a Centaur in the Archaeological M…
Bronze Lamp with a Centaur in the Archaeological M…
Rape of Proserpina from Baelo Claudia in the Archa…
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
86 visits
Prayer Book with Images in Ghubar Script in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, August 2019
Title: Prayer Book
Calligrapher: 'Abd al-Qadir Hisari (Turkish)
Date: dated 1180 AH/1766 CE
Geography: Made in Turkey
Medium: Manuscript: ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper
Binding: leather and gold
Dimensions: H. 6 in. (15.2 cm)
W. 4 in. (10.2 cm)
Classification: Codices
Credit Line: Purchase, Friends of Islamic Art Gifts, 2014
Accession Number: 2014.44
This small prayer book, or du'anama, belongs to a corpus of illustrated devotional texts produced in the Ottoman Empire in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Unlike most prayer books created at the time, this one contains twenty-nine drawings of traditional Islamic themes and subjects, which are outlined in gold and filled with prayers in ghubar naskh, an especially fine or "dust-like" variety of the naskh script. These include representations of the Ka'ba, the footprints (kadem) of the Prophet Muhammad, the Seal of Solomon, the bifurcated sword of 'Ali (zu'l fiqar), Noah's Ark, the lamp of the Prophet, the trumpet of the Archangel Israfil, and the cave from the story of the Seven Sleepers in the Qur'an, among others. The manuscript is signed and dated by the calligrapher, a prominent mid-eighteenth-century master known for his calligrams and pictorial calligraphic compositions, such as the galleon with inscriptions referring to the story of the Seven Sleepers also in the Metropolitan's collection (2003.241). It also contains collectors' stamps dating to the first half of the nineteenth century. The leather binding is decorated with stamped and gilded medallions within a simple border. Prayer manuals enjoyed wide popularity in the Ottoman Empire in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a time of political reform and religious revivalism. Used for individual prayer, they also served as mediational devices to protect, comfort, and heal their owners.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/629452
Calligrapher: 'Abd al-Qadir Hisari (Turkish)
Date: dated 1180 AH/1766 CE
Geography: Made in Turkey
Medium: Manuscript: ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper
Binding: leather and gold
Dimensions: H. 6 in. (15.2 cm)
W. 4 in. (10.2 cm)
Classification: Codices
Credit Line: Purchase, Friends of Islamic Art Gifts, 2014
Accession Number: 2014.44
This small prayer book, or du'anama, belongs to a corpus of illustrated devotional texts produced in the Ottoman Empire in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Unlike most prayer books created at the time, this one contains twenty-nine drawings of traditional Islamic themes and subjects, which are outlined in gold and filled with prayers in ghubar naskh, an especially fine or "dust-like" variety of the naskh script. These include representations of the Ka'ba, the footprints (kadem) of the Prophet Muhammad, the Seal of Solomon, the bifurcated sword of 'Ali (zu'l fiqar), Noah's Ark, the lamp of the Prophet, the trumpet of the Archangel Israfil, and the cave from the story of the Seven Sleepers in the Qur'an, among others. The manuscript is signed and dated by the calligrapher, a prominent mid-eighteenth-century master known for his calligrams and pictorial calligraphic compositions, such as the galleon with inscriptions referring to the story of the Seven Sleepers also in the Metropolitan's collection (2003.241). It also contains collectors' stamps dating to the first half of the nineteenth century. The leather binding is decorated with stamped and gilded medallions within a simple border. Prayer manuals enjoyed wide popularity in the Ottoman Empire in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a time of political reform and religious revivalism. Used for individual prayer, they also served as mediational devices to protect, comfort, and heal their owners.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/629452
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.