0 favorites     0 comments    80 visits

See also...


Keywords

art
MetropolitanMuseum
MMA
Met
Islamic
NewYorkCity
Manhattan
NewYork
NY
NYC
2019
manuscript
painting
museum
NikonCoolPixB500


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

80 visits


Laila and Majnun at School in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, August 2019

Laila and Majnun at School in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, August 2019
"Laila and Majnun at School", Folio from a Khamsa (Quintet) of Nizami
A.H. 835/ A.D. 1431–32


Object Details

Title: "Laila and Majnun at School", Folio from a Khamsa (Quintet) of Nizami

Calligrapher: Ja'far Baisunghuri (active first half 15th century)

Author: Nizami (1141–1209)

Date: A.H. 835/ A.D. 1431–32

Geography: Made in present-day Afghanistan, Herat

Medium: Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper

Dimensions: Page: H. 12 5/16 in. (31.3 cm)
W. 9 in. (22.9cm)
Mat: H. 19 1/4 in. (48.9 cm)
W. 14 1/4 in. (36.2 cm)

Classification: Codices

Credit Line: Purchase, Lila Acheson Wallace Gift, 1994

Accession Number: 1994.232.4


This splendid painting is from a manuscript of the frequently illustrated story of Laila and Majnun by the twelfth-century Persian poet Nizami. It was commissioned by the Timurid prince Baisunghur of Herat, one of the greatest bibliophiles in all Islamic history, who gathered at his court the very best painters from Baghdad, Tabriz, Shiraz, and Samarkand to illustrate his matchless collection of books. This illustration depicts Qais, the future "mad one" (Majnun) for love, and Laila, his beloved, who meet for the first time as children at a mosque school. The painting underscores the closely related aesthetics of figural painting and abstract calligraphy, architectural tiling and royal carpet weaving in traditional Islamic civilization, united here in a visual symphony of flat but dramatically colored patterns. The scene depicts the child lovers framed in the mosque's prayer niche in order to emphasize their mystical status. These visual conventions of Persian art, usually laden, as here, with Neoplatonic symbolism, crystallized in the royal cities of Tabriz and then Herat at the turn of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries and endured for another 250 years in the court paintings of Iran, Turkey, and India.


Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/455041

Comments

Sign-in to write a comment.