Plaque with sphinx trampling enemy, Metropolitan Museum of Art: Ancient Near Eastern Art
Rogers Fund, 1964 Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY
Medium: Ivory
(via met-africa-oceania)
Illuminated Folio from a Gulistan (Rose Garden) of Sa'di (c. 1213-1291), Sultan Muhammad, Cleveland Museum of Art: Islamic Art
The Gulistan, completed around 1258, is one of the most celebrated works of Persian literature. The book’s name means “rose garden” in Persian; just as a rose garden is a collection of flowers, the contents are a collection of anecdotes. Written in both prose and verse, the Gulistan was used for centuries as a primer for schoolchildren in greater Iran, India, and Turkey. The text on these pages is written in nastaliq script and comes from the first chapter, “On the Conduct of Kings.”
The exquisite borders of these two folios show lions, dragons, foxes, and peacocks in a lush landscape, painted in gold and silver that has tarnished over time.
Medium: opaque watercolor, ink, gold and silver on paper
(via virtual-artifacts)