<
Find the perfect fit with Amazon Prime. Try Before You Buy.


Find the perfect fit with Amazon Prime. Try Before You Buy.



Timurid Illustration

Ulugh Beg, eldest son of Shah Rukh, seated on a carpet, Samarqand, 1435-1440



Ulugh Beg with ladies of his harem and retainers
Historical period: Timurid period, 1425-1450
Medium: Opaque watercolor, ink and gold on paper
Dimensions: H x W: 31.7 x 24.1 cm (12 1/2 x 9 1/2 in)
Geography: Uzbekistan
Accession Number: F1946.26
Classification: Painting
Label: The right half of a double- page frontispiece, this remarkable painting depicts Ulugh Beg (1393-1449), a grandson of Timur (Tamerlane), the founder of the powerful Timurid dyansty of Iran and central Asia (1370-1506). An accomplished bibliophile, historian, mathematician, and above all, an astronomer, Ulugh Beg built a celebrated observatory in Samarqand. In this painting, he is shown in a ceremonial courtly setting, which often was held in the open air. While the composition conforms to the norms of Timurid pictorial style, with its emphasis on idealized figural types, two-dimensional spaces, and finely painted surfaces, the bold, saturated colors are unusal and may be a particular feature of fifteenth-century painting from Samarqand.
Ulugh Beg with ladies of his harem and retainers, Freer | Sackler

Back to the smaller image of Ulugh Beg, eldest son of Shah Rukh, seated on a carpet, Samarqand, 1435-1440








Free Web Hosting