122 50 19MB
English Pages 80 [84] Year 1998
PUBLICATIONS
HREVE SIMPSON
Persian Poetry, Painting Illustrations in a
0" Patronam
Sixteenth/Century Masterpiece
Persian Poetry, Painting
&
Patronage
Persian Poetry, Painting Illustrations in a
&
Patronage
Sixteenth/Century Masterpiece
MARIANNA SHREVE SIMPSON III
Freer Gallery of
Smithsonian
Art
Institution,
Yale University Press,
Washington, D.C.
New Haven and London
rresr Ga!f©ry of Art
Copyright
All
© 1998 Smithsonian Institution
rights reserved
Published in 1998 by Yale University Press,
New Haven and London
in association with the Freer Gallery of Art,
Smithsonian
Institution,
Washington, D.C.
Edited by
Ann Hofstra Grogg
Designed by Derek Birdsall RDi Typeset in Monotype Poliphilus with Blado
Italic
by Omnific Studios
Printed in Italy by Amilcare Pizzi S.p.A.
Library of Congress Cataloging^in^Publication Data
Simpson, Marianna Shreve, 1949^ Persian poetry, painting &: patronage sixteenth-'century masterpiece
/
:
illustrations in a
Marianna Shreve Simpson,
cm.
p.
Includes bibliographical references
(p.
)
and index.
ISBN 0^300^07483^2 (cloth)
—
i.JamT, I4i4.'i492. Haft awrang
of Art. Manuscript. 46.12
—
Illustrations.
books and manuscripts, Iranian. manuscripts. Islamic
—
Illustrations. 2. Freer
4.
3.
Illumination of
Illumination of books and
Iran. 5. Illumination of
— Washington (D.C.) ND3399.J35S56 — manuscripts
Gallery
I.
books and
Title.
1997
745.6'7'o955
dc2i
97^41288
CIP
The paper used the
in this publication meets the
American National Standard
for
minimum requirements for
Permanence of Paper for Printed
Library Materials, z 3 9.48 984.1.
Cover: The the
Aziz and Zulaykha Enter the Capital of E^ypt and Come Out to Greet Them (folio loob, detail)
Egyptians
CONTENTS
6
Foreword by Milo Cleveland Beach
7
Preface
9
PART
21
PART 2. ILLUSTRATIONS
20
The Wise Old Man Chides a Foolish Youth
22
A Depraved Man Commits Bestiality and Is Berated by Satan (folio 30a)
24
The Simple Peasant Entreats
26
A Father Advises His Son about Love (folio 52a)
28
Tlic Dervish Picks
30
Bandits Attack the Caravan ofAynie and Ria (folio 64b)
32
The Aziz and Zulaykha Enter the Capital of Egypt and the Egyptians Come Out to Greet Them
34
Yusuf
3
6
I.
Is
PERSIAN POETRY, PAINTING & PATRONAGE: SULTAN IBRAHIM MIRZa's Hajtawrang
SULTAN IBRAHIM MIRZa's Hajt awrang
IN
the
(folio
Salesman Not
i
oa)
Sell His Wonderful
to
Donkey
(folio 38b)
Up His Beloved's Hairfrom the Hammam Floor (folio 59a)
Rescuedfront
the
Well (folio 105a)
Yusuj Tends His Flocks (folio
Zulaykha
1 1
ob)
Maidens in Her Garden (folio
14b)
38
Yusuf Preaches
40
Tlie Infant Witness Testifies to
42
Yusuf Gives
44
The Gnostic Has a
Vision of Angels Carrying Trays of Light to the Poet Sa'^di (folio 147a)
46
The Pir Rejects
Ducks Brought as
48
The Fickle Old Lover Is Knocked
50
The Arab Berates His Guestsfor Attempting to Pay Himjor His
52
The Townsman Robs
54
Solomon and Bilqis Sit Together and Converse Frankly
56
Salaman and Absal Repose on
5 8
The Murid Kisses
60
The Flight of
6z
The East Ajrican Looks at Himself in
64
Qciys First Glimpses Layli (folio 23 la)
66
Majnun Approaches
68
Majnun Comes befne Layli Disguised as a Sheep
70
The Mi'^raj of
72
Khusraw Parviz and Sliirin Deal with
74
Iskandar Suffers a Nosebleed and Is Laid Down
76
Chronology
77
Bibliography
78
Index
a
to
's
Yusuf Innocence (folio 120a) 's
Royal Bampiet hi Honor of His Marriage
the
's
the
the
(folio
1
32a)
Murid (folio 153b) 162a) Hospitality (folio
Orchard (folio 179b)
Happy
Feet (folio
the Tortoise {folio 21
the
Presents by the
off the Rooftop (folio
the Villager's
the Pir
1
Isle (folio
1
(folio
1
88a)
94b)
207b)
$h) the
Mirror (folio 221 b)
Camp of Layli's Caravan
(folio 25 3a)
(folio
264a)
Prophet (folio 275a) the
Fishmonger (folio 29 1 a) to
Rest (folio 298a)
169b)
(folio
loob)
FOREWORD
Even at the end of this image^rich and media^saturated century, particularly those
from the Persian world, continue
the general public alike.
Hundreds of
and the ways
both scholar and
for
and ornament,
still
Perhaps not surprisingly,
draw viewers
unique and
into an aesthetic realm
how this visual landscape was constructed
mechanics, conceptual parameters, and visual dynamics worked remain
its
a century of scholarship.
elusive after
Our
which
in
art.
hold a special fascination
years after their creation, these books, with their
sophisticated linkage of word, image,
unlike any in the history of
to
books from Islamic lands,
illustrated
understanding of
moved toward approaches
has in recent years
this tradition
that attempt
broader cultural and aesthetic interpretations of Persian painting and manuscript production. Stdtan Ibrahim
Mirza Haft awrang: A Primely Manuscriptfroin
Sixteenth'^ Century Iran (Yale
's
and
Press, 1997) reflects both these recent intellectual realignments
and scholarship
Gallery of Art and Arthur
at the Freer
Persian Poetry Painting
&
Patronage: Illustrations
in a
M.
University
the continuing role of research
Sackler Gallery. This publication,
SixteentluCentury Masterpiece,
is
a
condensed
summary of the much larger monograph, and focuses particularly on its outstanding paintings. The more than
entire project represents
a decade of research
and thought by Dr. Marianna Shreve
Simpson, formerly the Galleries' curator of Islamic Near Eastern important
new
contribution.
Chief among
art,
and her
these has been her emphasis
efforts represent
an
on Persian manuscript
—
paintings not as single, independent works of art but as parts of a larger collaborative ensemble
the
book. By reexamining from this perspective a particularly rich and pivotal moment in the history and
development of Persian painting under the Safavid dynasty
(i
501-1736), she has produced a
comprehensive, meticulous analysis of both the physical and conceptual manuscript.
It is
of a single royal
totality
testimony to the complexity of issues inherent in the study of these works as well as
the earher priorities
of the
field that
very few illustrated Islamic manuscripts have been published in
odds with scholarship
their entirety, a state quite at
research begins to help close that gap in
its
skillful
for
European manuscripts. Dr. Simpson's
documentation of the creation of one of the most
important illustrated Persian manuscripts in existence. Acquired by the Freer Gallery of Art in 1946 by
its
then director Archibald Wenley, the Freer Jami
object but as a critical cultural
is
recognized not simply as a beautiful
document.
This study, cast in the form of a vigorous codicological inquiry, has produced clear picture
of
how the book was conceived,
written, painted, decorated,
brings to these issues a deep knowledge of
for the first
time a
and bound. Dr. Simpson
manuscript production and dissemination in the
Persianate cultural sphere, particularly the structure and function of artistic ateliers (kitabklumas) in
Safavid Iran.
And while important new information has also been gathered on a host of artists and
calligraphers, the author's greatest contribution
is
her careful analysis of the respective, interlinked
roles played by text, painting, and illumination in Islamic visual thought.
ration of avenues such as these that
we
will begin to understand
how
It is
through careful explo^
a culture both
saw
itself
and
how it wished to be seen by others. Dr. Simpson's research was supported by the Smithsonian Institution's Scholarly Studies
Program and
the National Gallery of Art's Center for
Ibrahim Mirza's Haft awrang
was published with
Advanced Study
in the Visual Arts. Sultan
the assistance of the Getty
Grant Program.
Additional funding was provided by the Freer and Sackler Galleries' Publications
Fund,
initially established
with a grant from the
Andrew W. Mellon
Endowment
Foundation and generous
contributions from private donors. For consukation, guidance, and thoughtful, sustained Freer Gallery also thanks
of Islamic Near Eastern
Thomas W.
art;
Karen
Lentz, deputy director;
Sagstetter, editor in chief;
University Press; Derek Birdsall, designer; and
Ann
Massumeh Farhad,
associate curator
John Nicoll, managing
Hofstra Grogg, editor.
effort, the
director, Yale
The many
other
contributors to the research and publication are mentioned in the preface to Sultan Ibrahim Mirza's
Haft awrang, the monograph upon which
this
book
is
based.
Milo Cleveland Beach Director, Freer Gallery of Art and
Smithsonian Institution
6
Arthur M. Sackler Gallery
PREFACE
This publication summarizes research undertaken on a major work of art the Freer Gallery of
A
Art and presented more completely
in the Islamic collection
in Sultan Ibrahim Mirza's Haft awran^:
Princely Manuscript from SixteentluCcntury Iran (Yale University Press, 1997).
graphic study and
this shorter version
of Islamic
was
art. It
Both the mono^
have been inspired and influenced by two esteemed specialists
Gary Welch,
the brilliant connoisseurship of Stuart
Islamic and later Indian art at Harvard University, that initially opened to the
curator emeritus of
my eyes as a graduate student
dazzling beauty of Persian painting and to the creativity of sixteenth^century court
patrons. His seminal publications
on
artists
investigations into the Haft awrang manuscript flattery,
the format of this
Royal Safavid Manuscripts oj I first
turned the
folios
is
and
Persian Painting: Five
Century (Braziller, 1976).
art at the Freer
me
my
princely patron. Imitation being the sincerest
modeled on Gary Welch's ever^invaluable
Gallery of Art,
at the
who
over the years. Esin Atil remains
indebted to her for continual, gentle guidance in I
its
of Sultan Ibrahim Mirza's Haft awrang
former curator of Islamic experiences possible for
book
the Sixteenth
and
the Safavid period, including the magisterial Houghton
Shahnameh co^authored with Martin B. Dickson, have provided continual stimulus throughout
of
of
has
encouragement of Esin Atil,
made many
my museum
other wonderful
mentor, and
I
am
deeply
how to look at and think about works of Islamic art.
am also grateful to Richard and Loren Kagan for their unconditional interest and support.
Marianna Slircve Simpson Baltimore,
Maryland
February iggj
Overleaf:
Gold--flecked page (folio
7
1
82a)
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4
PART
I.
PERSIAN POETRY, PAINTING & PATRONAGE:
SULTAN IBRAHIM mirza's Hajt awvang
Poetry and painting have long been allied in the arts and culture of Iran (also
Since
at least the twelfth century,
Persian poets have
woven
Persian painters of the late thirteenth century through early
intended to evoke poetic contents, mood, and meaning.
and
visual arts
was forged through
taste for
and patronage
oi the
twin
calligraphy, decoration, painting,
as Persia).
verses out of pictorial imagery, while
modern times composed
Over the
illustrations
centuries this union of the literary
the intermediary of royal patrons, including the rulers
who commissioned
princes of Iran's leading dynasties,
known
arts of literature
and binding)
deluxe copies of classical poetic
texts.
and
The
(including poetry) and the book (including
resulted in the creation of
some of
the greatest
masterpieces of Persian culture.
The remarkable
results that
could be achieved through the alliance of poetry, painting, and
patronage in Iran are exemplified by a famous illustrated manuscript belonging
of Art and seven
commonly known
poems
as the Freer
Constellation oj
the
and
called in English the Seven
Great Bear, which were composed by
and mystic. In
Abdul^Rahman
of the Haft awrang.
artists to transcribe,
(i
essential
Jami, a celebrated
—
501— 1732) with
illuminate,
The making and meaning of Sultan Ibrahim
and particularly of its twenty--eight illustrations ways that painting and poetry formed
Thrones or
the middle of the sixteenth century Sultan
Mirza, a young princely patron of the reigning Safavid dynasty Jami's poems, engaged a group of gifted
Gallery
Jami (accession number 46.12). The volume contains
collectively entitled the Hajt awrang
fifteenth^century poet, scholar,
to the Freer
and
a
Ibrahim
penchant
illustrate a special
copy
Mirza's splendid commission
constitute a fascinating story that reveals the
complements
for
many
in traditional Persian culture.
T/;e
Aziz
and
Ztilayklici
Enter the Capital oj
E^yptand the Egyptians Come Out
Them
9
(folio
loob, detail)
to
Greet
THE ACCOUNT OF the Freer Jami begins in the 146OS-1480S when Abdul^Rahman Jami (1414-1492) wrote the seven poems that make up the Haft awrang. At that time Jami was a prominent author and spiritual leader in Herat, capital of the theivruling
and
seat
During
of
its
last
and most cultivated
his long reign
many of the literary and
and
wisdom)
The
Timurid dynasty (1370-1506) Sultan-Husayn Mirza.
ruler
The poems of
among
the most
literature
and
please the
upon
among
these
landmarks and
(i
memorable works of Abdul^Rahman Jami's consider^
monly used
pairs. Persian poets
the masmvi form for narrative (including
romances and bear the names of
their
main
and Ztilaykha, Salamari and Ahsal, and Layli and Majntin. Silsilat
aUdhahah (Chain of gold),
Stibliat al-ahrar
uncertain.
writings of earlier poets, particularly
the
141-1209),
for the
and
attitudes of the
joined
at a
We do not know,
the seven individual
When,
and
ethical ideas of Sufism, a mystical
Jami grounded
Naqshbandiyya, age. In 1456
a Sufi order or
Jami
rose to
to
assume the dual position of pir
explore and express certain key ideas of Sufi Islam. In Sufi
(folio
title
piece to Salaiuan and Ahsal
182b)
0
A Father Advises His Son about Love (folio 52a, detail)
" .
..
'
iff
Opposite:
Text
folios
(folios
10
and
brotherhood that he had
Naqshbandi order in Herat.
Illuminated
r
branch
his poetry in the beliefs
about 1468, Jami began writing the Hajt aw rang, his principal
concern was
(Rosary of the pious).
Nizami of Ganja
of his masnavis, on the other hand, are based on
specifically,
young
heavily
concept and format of the multipoem Hajt awrang.
(master) and murshid (leader) of the
three
dis-'
book of
Sultan-Husayn Mirza, although the poet obviously sought to
spiritual, philosophical,
characters: Yusiij
Another
is
Timurid monarch by writing four of
of Islam. More
romantic epics) and didactic poetry. Three of the Hajt awrang poems are allegorical
consist of a series of didactic
Abdul^Rahman Jami began to compose the poetic text at
com^
heroic, historic,
—
epic and didactic genres.
The themes and messages
able oeuvre. All seven are written in a Persian poetic form called mcisnavi,
comprising a sequence of couplets that rhyme in
free)
Khiradnania^i Iskandari (Iskandar's
poems in his honor. Following time^honored tradition, Jami drew
art.
the Hajt awrang rank high
of the
precise genesis of the Hajt awrang
the behest of
of the Timurid period and fostered a
climate in which poets and painters produced works that today remain
landmarks of Persian
—combines
for instance, if
(1470-1506), SultaivHusayn Mirza patronized artistic elite
Tiihjat al^ahrar (Gift
courses, while the seventh
of Ytisuj and Ziilaykha
98b-99a)
mystical doctrine
God is manifest everywhere and is the sole and
source of beauty, truth,
The
love.
material
absolute
goodness, wisdom, and, most important,
purity,
and phenomenal world
is
but a mere reflection of
God's perfection, and the goal of every adherent of Sufi orders
Naqshbandiyya
to be spiritually
is
reborn in the unity of God.
mystic struggles constantly to transcend daily ical
embracing love
of
God.
Jami's
The
own commitment
Sufi
phys-'
selfless, all'
to the Sufi ideal
of
Khiradnai)ia-'i Iskandari
trativc tales instead
illustrative
programs
Salaman and
to
include paintings of the secondary lUus'
of scenes of the primary narrative episodes.
For most works of classical Persian poetry there was a considerable
like the
human sensations and
experiences and to achieve a state of true being through the
message of the discourses. Even the Ahsal and
hiatus between the time of their literary creation
painted illustration.
and
the time of their
The earliest known illustrated volume of the Khamsa
(Quintet) of Nizami Ganjavi, for example, dates several hundred years after
its
composition.
The
Haft awran£, on the other hand, seems to have
Abdul^Rahman
divine perfection and spiritual perfectibility resonates throughout the Haft
been illustrated during
awrang and helps unify the seven separate masnavis.
copy of the YhshJ and Ziilaykha poem dated July 1488 and containing two
Like that of other Sufi writers, Jami's language images and mystical symbols that are open
Jami evidently recognized
tion.
particular
Thus
poems and framed
Although
their presence
andAhsal and
devices for those
who would
masnavis.
Siihliat
of the
to
ethical
illustrative parables.
which they
are
are also
and
characters
relate
themati'
most apparent in the three
prominent within Salamaii
for artists
The pictorial cycles of
who had
to illustrate the poet's
SilsHat al-dhaliah, Tiihfat al^ahrar,
aUabrar, for instance, consist exclusively of representations
stories that
help structure the
spaces reserved for paintings: one contains a preliminary sketch represent^
ing Yusuf and Zulaykha in Zulaykha's palace.' Curiously
perhaps not coincidentally poetic manuscript, the
Timurid
ruler
poems and
reinforce the
moraHzing
—
Biistaii
this date
—
although
accords precisely with that of a
(Orchard) of
Sultan^Husayn Mirza and
positions by Bihzad, a
Sa'^di,
made
illustrated
in
Herat
for the
with beautiful com^
famous painter of the period.
One
of Bihzad's
paintings depicts Zulaykha attempting to seduce Yusuf in her palace the very scene planned for the YhsuJ and Zulaykha manuscript of 1488.'
While Bihzad was century poet, he tion
ostensibly illustrating a text by SaMi, a thirteenth--
may
and rendition of
Zulaykha
these anecdotal interludes as instructive
read the Haft awratig. Yet they subsequently
proved to be equally important
and
might
Khiradnaina-'i Iskaiidari.
Jami undoubtedly conceived
complex
interpreta--
Siihhat aUahrar,
human and animal
and purpose
and parables
and
stories
and bracket one or more longer discourses
didactic masnavis, stories
and
his discussion of philosophical
Usually succinct, these passages feature
cally.
wide range of
to a
he emphasized the didactic points of these
with a sequence of anecdotal
issues
rich in metaphorical
that his discussions of abstract ideals,
particularly in Silsilat al^dhahah, Tuhjat aUahrar,
not be easy to follow.
is
Jami's lifetime, as attested by a
tale
have been more immediately inspired in his concept the scene by the mystical version of the
written by his contemporary Jami. Similarly, the presence
of Bihzad and other talented
composing
Yusuf and
artists in
Herat during the time Jami was
his masnavis doubtless led the poet to appreciate the value
of
paintings in conveying the messages of his Haft awrang. Certainly the court of
Sultan^Husayn Mirza provided the
ing to combine in the
right setting for poetry
initial illustration of a
Jami's Hajtawrang.
II
new
and
literary "classic"
paints
such
as
IT
HAS BEEN
and fame began
said that Jami's popularity
to
wane after
Naqshbandiyya, took control of Iran
for the ruler.
Shah
Isma'il
planned
that he
The
in 1501.
first
Safavid
much
(reigned 1501-24), supposedly hated Jami so
i
to destroy the poet's
tomb
in Herat.
Notwithstanding
with
coincided
Khanim,
arrangements
the eldest daughter of
ship, this marriage least
Tahmasp
superior intelligence, beauty,
volumes of the Haft awrang were produced with
great regularity throughout the Safavid period,
manuscripts
—
including compilations of
all
—
are
multiple poems, and individual
poems
manuscript commissioned by Shah
—who was toward Jami— program. — Mirza
by
at least
two hundred
now known. Of
his grandfather's negative attitude
contains by far the most ambitious and innovative pictorial
Indeed in all its artistic features
Jami
the Freer
illustration
the Hajt awrangtViAi has
As (i
of
prince
a
540-1 577) came
arts,
and
calligraphy, illumination,
Safavid
the
and
particularly poetry
Bahram Mirza
and
spiritual
secular subjects
Ibrahim Mirza was raised
historian
recitation of the
Qazi Ahmad,
to
at
and admirer of the prince. Sultan Ibrahim Mirza also excelled in
composed
and nuances
Under
the pen--name Jahi, Sultan Ibrahim Mirza
and Turkish;
verses in Persian
at least
of his Divan (Poems) survive today.^ Qazi for his
two posthumous copies
Ahmad
also extols the prince
"golden hands in painting in decorating" and
for his
"bookbinding, gilding, gold^sprinkling, the making of
mixing of phy,
Koran
The
colors."'
mastery of
stencils
and
the
prince's real forte seems to have been in calligra^
Ahmad praises him for the ability to write in both large and
and Qazi
fine scripts."
Sultan Ibrahim Mirza would have received encouragement for all these artistic pursuits est in his
from Shah Tahmasp,
who apparently took a special inters
young nephew's education. Furthermore, during
years in Tabriz,
royal court.
During
—
and sponsored
the arts
house," but actually signifying both calligraphers,
specialists created
artistic
Tahmasp 's
at
"book
and
where
studio
kitahkhana
library)
texts.
was the Khamsa of Nizami, transcribed by
Shah Tahmasp appointed Sultan Ibrahim Mirza, then
Imam
Reza,
province of Khurasan. According to Qazi
Ibrahim Mirza with
selected
Among the
when Sultan Ibrahim
Shah^Mahmud al^Nishapuri and embellished with
of the venerable shrine of the
mark of
five
and other
binders,
by a half-dozen or so briUiant painters.^
In 1554-55
about
at the
Shah Tahmasp
sixteen years of age, to be governor of the important city of
in a final
—and
employed
a kitahkhana (literally,
illuminators,
painters,
his uncle's court
the great calligrapher illustrations
artists
deluxe volumes of classical Persian
splendid works in process
Mirza came to
many
the
the early decades of his long reign.
was an avid patron of
numerous
his formative
Ibrahim Mirza would have come in contact with
possibly even taken instruction from
th[is] position
his regard
hundred
one by one
handpicked entourage seem arriving there
the prince a retinue of
and noblemen
"whom he had
The
prince and his
esteem and dignity."^
to
site
Ahmad, "The shah honored
and expectations, gave
for their
Mashhad,
in the northeastern Iranian
among the people of knowledge" and,
courtiers, bodyguards,
have
made a leisurely journey
on i9March 1556.
12
precise date of the
Mashhad with
festivities lasting
known
work of patroiv
today as the Freer Jami
While contemporary
—was
sources offer no hint of a
two
1
con"
compositions illustrating marital and amorous themes.
illustrations in the Yusuj and Ziilaykha
(folio
his Haft awrang
the Capital of
00b) and
—
Egypt and
Yiisif Gives a
poem
the Egyptians
The Aziz
Come Out
to
to
Of and
Greet
Royal Banquet in Honor of His Marriage
suggest the most obvious parallels to events, including
(folio
132a)
arrival
ceremonies and wedding
Ibrahim Mirza's marriage
to
festivities,
recorded
at the
time of Sultan
Gawhar/Sultan Khanim. (These and
all
paintings in the Freer Jami are illustrated and discussed in Part 2, arranged
by
folio
bility
number.) Indeed, Sultan Ibrahim Mirza may have had the possi/
of marriage to Gawhar^Sultan
pictorial
program of
Khanim in mind while planning the
his magnificent Haft awrang.
a contemporary
"poetical criticism, the solution of fine points of versification
of Sufism and love."'
tains several
of his
and
The
seems to have been preceded by
Mashhad and marriage to Gawhar^Sultan Khanim,
member
as a calligrapher
in
or at
connection between the prince's commission and his appointment
Them
the second Safavid ruler (reigned
from the reading and
musical composition. According
the Haft awrang manuscript
already well under way.
in the
1524-76), in Tabriz. There the prince was trained in a wide range of
to
—
and celebrated
it
was arranged,
nephew's bride because of her
wisdom.'''
determine, but
the governor/
Safavid historian reports that
time Sultan Ibrahim Mirza's most important
and involvement
collecting of art. Following the death
in 1549, Sultan
age
this
Zulaykha Enter
painting. Virtually every
Shah Tahmasp,
By
as his
and
less
months during the spring and summer of 1 560.
Mirza
was accomplished
poet and active in the patronage and
several
these,
Ibrahim
Sultan
dynasty.
quite naturally by his interest
the court of his uncle
and
come down to us today.
family (both male and female)
of his father
—
without a doubt the most beautiful copy of
is
difficult to
is
a lengthy betrothal
these the
grandson. Sultan Ibrahim
Isma^^il's
clearly undeterred
and
seven poems, selections of
marriage
Gawhar/Sultan
his cousin
One
or
Gawhar^Sultan
to
Shah Tahmasp. As with
between the prince and
continued and became well established in Iran by the early part of the six^
selected
marriage
his
for
agreed upon, by the shah himself
the shah's reported censure, the practice of illustrating Jami's masnavis
teenth century. Illustrated
Mashhad more
Sultan Ibrahim Mirza's appointment to
his
death in 1492 and especially after the Safavids, a dynasty with no tolerance
to
Mashhad,
Illuminated signed by
title
piece to Yusuj and Zulaykha,
Abdullah aUShirazi
(folio
84b)
WHATEVER THE prince's volume of tracted,
motivations, his commission of an illustrated
the Haft awrang turned out to be an extremely ambitious, pro^
and even
far-flung undertaking.
scribal notations at the
copying of the
As recorded in the colophons, or
end of each of the masmvis, the transcription or
text alone took nine years
involved the participation of no three different Iranian cities (see
less
than
—from
five
1556 to 1565
calligraphers
—and
working
in
Chronology). Furthermore, the sequence
ot
the masmvis in the
volume does not follow
of
their transcription.
The
the chronological order
format of the manuscript's 304
folios
is
also
complicated, with the written surface composed of one piece of cream
paper and the margins of another piece of colored paper.
Thus we may
surmise from the codicology or material structure of the manuscript that its
production was a complex process, requiring careful planning and
coordination.
(folios
order of the kitahkhaiia of
document
AbuM^Fath
38b and 162a), and the historian Qazi
his uncle
Shah Tahmasp,
numerous the Freer
artists
head of the
kitahkhaiia
Sultan Ibrahim Mirza"
Ahmad
confirms that, like
as
governor
as well as the
was
ot
Mashhad.'" From two of
primary sources we
know that the
named Muhibb^Ali, who
a calligrapher
undoubtedly helped Sultan Ibrahim Mirza develop the material and artistic
program
Muhibb^Ali
that Sultan entire
also
for the
Haft awrang.
would have been
As
kitahdar,
or kitahkhaiia chief,
responsible for the preparation of
the necessary materials, including the
two
sets
of paper used
Colophon of
Silsilat al-dhahab,
Malik al^Daylami
(folio
all
for the folios.
Jami
the seven
the kitahkhaiia
staff. It is
Ibrahim Mirza originally intended Muhibb^Ali text, as
to
and
possible
copy the
suggested by the calligrapher's transcription of two of
poems of
may
the Haft awraiig. Either the prince or his kitahdar
have decided early on to expand the calligraphic ranks of the take advantage of the opportunity to engage
kitahkhaiia
Shah-'Mahmud
al^
Nishapuri, the celebrated (and by 1556 quite elderly) scribe of Shah
Tahmasp's
Khaiiisa,
who had moved from
several years before Sultan there.
Muhibb'Ali
Ishrati
Jami
—
text
—
Rustam--Ali, Malik
as well as the illuminator
al'
Abdullah
who signed his name in the elaborate title piece or illumination
head of the
Yiisiif
and Zuhiykha poem.
Abdullah would have been but one of worked on
Mashhad
eventually enlisted three other calligraphers to tran/
Daylami, and Ayshi ibn al'Shirazi,
the Safavid court to
Ibrahim Mirza assumed the governorship
scribe certain parts of the Freer
volume was
the Safavid prince supported a kitahkhaiia with
during his time
Jami colophons
that the
and supervision of
for the selection
at the
Several inscriptions in the Freer Jami
made "by
and
the Haft awraiig project
scores of illuminators
who
under Muhibb-- All's supervision. In
addition to masiiavi headings and colophons, the Freer Jami boasts a decoration, including multicolored rubrics or chapter
dazzling array
of
headings, gold
column
These illuminated script tity
dividers,
and contribute
on
significantly to
its
that these artists
stenciled margins.
virtually every folio of the
overall aesthetic.
of the illumination as well as subtle variations
us both that the decorative
and
and gold'painted and
features appear
of
program involved many
The sheer
manu' quan--
design and form
tell
difTerent illuminators
undoubtedly worked in teams responsible
for
different sections of the manuscript.
signed by
46a)
Text
13
folio
of Suhhat al^ahrar
(folio
179a)
The distinct
and illumination of
transcription
—and
probably overlapping
—
phases in the creation of Sultan
Ibrahim Mirza's Haftawrang. The illustration represented
and
clearly involved a large
tion
is
signed (folio I20a),
two
the text constituted
yet a third
number of painters. Although one
phase
composi--
modern scholarship has yet to reach a consensus
Yet for every offers
set
compositional unit and fixed figure type, the Freer Jami
something unexpected, typically
way of conveying a familiar
a fresh
visual theme. For instance the bathhouse or hanimam of
Up
His Beloved's Hair from
the
Hammam
The Dervish Picks
Floor (folio 59a)
multichambered structure and presented in
conceived
is
sectional elevation. Bathers
doorways and move through
on the attribution of the full set of paintings and the identity of their artists.
and bath attendants
The originality and quality of
passageways, thus emphasizing the unified architectural space.
the illustrations correspond, however, to the
highest standards of Safavid period painting, and like the calligraphers,
had previously worked,
The
we may assume
some and perhaps even all of the Freer Jami
that,
painters
or at least been trained, at the Safavid court.
waiting horse and
groom
is
(folio
1
its
sense
device employed to similar advan^
King Solomon and
The many outdoor
88a).
The
enhanced by the projecting facade and
further
at the left, a
tage in the illustration featuring
twenty^eight compositions in the Freer Jami belong to the so^
emerged
enter the building's
of interior versus exterior
as a
scenes,
where
the
queen of Sheba
palaces, pavilions,
and
in the second
other habitats such as tents are often situated in lush settings, also provide
half of the fourteenth century, matured throughout the fifteenth, and
extended space and perspectival schemes. By juxtaposing open plain,
called classical tradition of Persian painting that
produced some of
Timurid and of
most memorable achievements during the
its
early Safavid periods.
The
principal
include large-scale compositions that frequently overflow
this tradition
into the surrounding margins; a bright
and extensive
(and often precious) pigments polished
palette
high sheen;
to a
scape settings; elegant, idealized figures in gorgeous
fluid,
attire;
ornamental patterns used on
intricate
costumes, carpets,
rhythmic
and canopies) and buildings
tents,
diverse flora
textiles
(including
(especially brick,
and woodwork). Full of exciting pictorial contrasts,
tile,
of jewel-'like
modeling of forms; expansive architectural and land^
lines; deliberate
and fauna; and
late
stylistic characteristics
the classical style
craggy
hills,
and
intricate facades
Yiisuf and Zulaykha
belong
to the aziz (minister)
Zulaykha and her
and
rooftops, the
of Egypt and the imminent progression of
feature of the Freer
Jami compositions
multiple focuses. These not only provide the
much
encourage
illustration in the
bridal party into the Egyptian capital (folio loob).
Another pervasive
also
first
poem conveys the expanse and richness of the domains
visual
quent diversion from the principal scene.
It is
instance, the negotiations between the peasant
Simple Peasant Entreats
the
field for diverse
"wandering" through
Salesman Not
to
the pictures
easy at
first
action but
to overlook, for
and the donkey seller in The
Sell His Wonderjul
Donkey
38b) while listening in on the baker and
even the mystical) with the everyday, mixes rigorous control and decorum
the bazaar or cantering along in front with the dappled horse
with the earthy and ribald, and matches a calculated sense of space with
elegant rider.
illogical proportions.
ture
IS Its
from the
sixteenth centuries positively throb
with
Approaches
life.
stylistic
pictorial elements
new and innovative. While certain formal features may
creativity
of individual
others pervade the entire
artists,
manuscript and are found in paintings unlikely
to
be by the same
hand. Thus we may regard the twenty--eight compositions
approach toward painting peculiar the tastes
to this
artistic
as reflecting
compositions
all
occupy the full space of the manuscript's written
figures.
As in
most
illustrations reflect certain typologies
and formulas.
cate, or at least closely follow, well-established
A
Jami
few scenes
Jami repli-'
compositional models.
The
most obvious instance is The Mi'^rajof the Prophet (folio 275a), in which the
Muhammad
Prophet celestial
The
on
his
human^headed
Buraq through
steed
a
firmament populated by a host of angels with Gabriel in the lead.
Flight of the Tortoise (folio 215 b) also belongs to a specific composi/-
tional
scheme
that can be traced
tional elements are
Attack
the
the
derived from a
In addition,
from the
more
back several
centuries.
generic, such as the battle
Caravan of Aynie and Ria
The Pir Rejects IS
rides
(folio
Other composi^
dominating Bandits
64b) and the core figure group in
Ducks Brought as Presents by
the
Murid (folio 153 b), which
common topos or formula for a prince visiting a hermit. many
specific
figural repertoire
of
familiar individuals are the
personages in the Freer Jami emerge
classical Persian painting.
Among the most
washerwoman and milkmaid
(folios 30a
231a), the languid youth (folios 52a, 105a, and r47a), the (folios
nob
and 253a), the second^story observers or
(folios I20a, 162a,
1
88a, 207b,
and 291a), the gardener with petitioner (folio i88a),
and
a
spade
(folios
thegrief^stricken
and
woodsman
hilltop onlookers
and 291a), the eager attendants
(folios 132a
52a and 207b), the aged
mourners
14
spatially
figure of
(folio 298a).
and
is
cul--de^sacs, past curious,
ambiguous and improbable
so inexorably led along
even bizarre, exchanges
situations that the pathetic
Majnun at the left side can be missed altogether.
Beyond such imaginative and
surface,
classical Persian painting, the Freer
tendency, found throughout the Freer
pelling characteristic of the Freer
and most are considerably larger. In addition, most take advantage of then-
and
switchbacks and into
and
artistic
overload the compositions. Here the eye
to
to
generous picture planes, often with extremely complex arrangements of settings
of Layli's Caravan (folio 253a) presents the most
extreme example of the Jami,
human
the exception of the initial painting (folio loa), the Freer
Camp
the
an
manuscript and subscribing
and expectations of its patron Sultan Ibrahim Mirza.
With
its
enjoying the acrobats, musicians, and children encamped above. Majnun
most pervasive and palpable
The illustrations in the Freer Jami partake directly of this vital
result
and
man mounting the camel in
A Depraved Man Commits Bestiality and Is Berated by Satan (folio 30a) while
style's
mode. Furthermore they regularly combine famiHar with those that are
(folio
at the side of
fea^
and
ings of the late fifteenth
customer
and many of the most remarkable Persian paints
Perhaps the
sense of energy,
his elderly
equally possible to miss the
their
and conse--
of Persian painting deftly juxtaposes the ideal and fantastic (sometimes
It is
is
distracting schemes, the
Jami paintings
interest, sustained through the activities
diversity of the principal
and secondary
Freer Jami compositions present a
is
their
most com^
high
level
of
and emotions, the number
figures.
As an aggregate, the
wide range of human experience, from
sexual intercourse (folio 30a), to imminent death (folio 298a), passing by
way of tions;
spiritual apotheosis, revelation,
and
prayer;
commercial transact
domestic chores (preparing food, washing clothes, spinning and
sewing, gathering firewood); animal husbandry (milking cows, watering
and feeding horses and camels);
and entertainment and leisure tered are expressions of love fear, incredulity,
Them
(folio
and devotion, anger, amazement,
the Freer
the Capital of
Jami
Egypt and
is
in the
self-doubt,
equally diverse. The
the Egyptians
Aziz
Come Out
to
and
Greet
lOob), for instance, contains more than one hundred figures,
plus several "hidden" rock^face creatures,
ways
and reading);
and censure.
The population of Zulaykha Enter
intellectual interests (chess
(music and games). Also regularly encoun^
who take part in many different
meeting between Zulaykha and the aziz of Egypt. Most
figures in the illustrations are extraneous to the central scene, such as the
embroidering
woman who
seems
totally oblivious to the
taking place over her head in The Flight of
Sometimes
amazing scene
Tortoise (folio
215b).
the figures are not so easy to identify or explain, such as the
blind beggar and his young (folio
the
64b). There
is,
companion
in fact, a certain,
in the
middle of
a battle scene
apparendy deliberate,
human ambiguity and mystery in many of these compositions.
level
of
The
cast
of supplemental characters in the Freer Jami includes a
plethora of children, including several babes in arms. tion to the YiisiiJ and Zulaykha
who
infant
miraculously
(folio i2oa).
poem
Only one
illustra^
requires the presence of a child, the the innocence of the prophet
testifies to
Yusuf
Here, however, the infant^witness resembles a small adult,
tall,
Throughout the Freer Jami
leafy trees.
mates and provides a
sometimes simply an
home
significant compositional
and dramatic
to flocks
attractive
the chinaror plane tree
of birds and their
nests.
landscape element, most plane
roles are played
by the
engaged in playing, shopping, and general merriment
Layli Disguised as a Sheep (folio 264a)
52a).
Sometimes
their activities are
more
serious,
the blind beggar in Bandits Attack the Caravan oj
or less certain, such as the
female
at the left side
(folio 253a).
Many
boy leading (folio
64b),
of Majniiii Approailies
the
Camp
of Layli's Carai'an
family groupings include mothers suckling and cud--
as well as
(folios 38b, 52a,
as the
young girl who may be trying to restrain an older
dling babies and tending young children
and 231a)
such
Aynieand Ria
two
(folios 30a,
nob, 169b,
i88a,
or three clearly identifiable or probable fathers
179b, and 231a) and possibly even a grandmother (folio
38b). Nurturing and caretaking are also implicit in Tlie Wise Old
Chides (folio
a Foolish
and
Youth (folio loa)
nob), where
a
Man
explicit in Yusuf Tends His Flocks
dappled marc nurses her
foal virtually
alongside a
human mother hugging her child.
its
special style.
As
Other
trees
mischief^making
nob, and
is
laid
down
in all Safavid painting, the
Jami
outdoor
scenes, here constituting threC'-quarters of the illustrations, include
many
the massive
Comes
before
stumps that burst
in the final illustration (folio 298a).
provide essential vantage points (folio loob), encourage
domestic
(folio 52a), shelter
activities (folios 30a, 105a,
231a), and anchor the scene (folios 38b and 64b).
Also noteworthy are the inscriptions incorporated
into the architecture
of nine paintings. Although hardly unprecedented, they seem to be more specific here
than in other Safavid manuscripts. Several are documentary
epigraphs in prose referring to Sultan Ibrahim Mirza and Shah (folios 38b, 132a,
147a),
and 162a).
and another quotes
Nizami
(folio
1
88a).
Tahmasp
One inscription comes from the Koran a verse
but the verses are not derived
identifiable
That they may have been composed
work of Persian
especially for the Freer
literature.
Jami
gested by the close relation between the content of the verses subject of the paintings.
The
15
(folio
by the twelfth^century Persian poet
The rest are also poetic,
from the Haft awrang or any other
Particular landscape features also regularly appear in the Freer
and form part of
into flames as Iskandar
and
active
with the twisted trunk and
tree
whirligig leaves that shelters Layli and her flock in Majniin
and
Although
trees serve a
and iconographic function. The most
whereas the other Freer Jami children are convincingly portrayed and (folios 30a, 38b,
predom^
verse written
on the back wall of
is
sug'
and
the
A Father
Advises His Son about Love (folio 52a), for instance, concerns a lover's
illustrative variety
heartache, while the poetic lines on the cornice of the building in The
relationship of
Gnostic
Has a
Vision of Angels Carrying Trays of Light
to the
Poet S/di (folio
147a) address a paradisiacal theme. Perhaps even more direct and referential are the verses
worked
and Ziilaykha illustrations,
into the architecture in three of the Yiisiif
which
refer
metaphorically either to the builds
ings or to the masnavi's protagonists (folios loob,
From
self^
1
14b,
and 120a). Jami
illustrations,
we may
dom
work. With two exceptions, the compositions are diverse
in their
painters enjoyed considerable free^
and decoration. The two exceptions
layout, format,
Chides
its
Youth (tolio loa),
a Foolish
uscript as well as the
first
which
is
the
first
in the Silsilat aUdhahah
are
in
The Wise Old Man
illustration in the
man"
poem, and The
Mtirid
Kisses the Pir's Feet (folio 207b), the initial painting in Tiihfat aUahrar.
These poems script
are
among
the
first
to
have been transcribed for the
and could have been ready for illustration
text. It IS intriguing to
modest in
size
manu^
in character
process of the manuscript's illustration
ally
—were
as
lacking the
and
text illustrations
on tangible forms
of scenes, the
H