candlestick
Object NameCandlestick
Made FromGlass, Gilding, Enamel
Dateabout 1340-1365
Place Madeprobably Egypt
TechniqueBlown, applied, gilded, enameled
SizeOverall H: 22.2 cm, Diam (max): 20.4 cm
Accession Number90.1.1
Credit LinePurchased with donated funds from the Clara S. Peck Endowment Fund
Curatorial Area(s)
Exhibitions
Glass of the Sultans
The Unity of Islamic Art
On ViewAncient Gallery
Interpretive NotesOnly two enameled and gilded glass candlesticks from the Islamic world are known. Here is one of them. The shape derives from Islamic metalwork. (Bronze candlesticks are relatively common.) The polychrome enamels and the gilding cover so much of the surface that the underlying honey-colored glass is barely visible. The main geometric pattern, consisting of elongated hexagons and five-pointed stars, was widely used in Mamluk art of the late 14th and 15th centuries. The inscription is translated, “Glory to our lord, the sovereign, the learned, the just, the holy warrior, the defender, the protector of the frontiers, the fortified [by Allah], the triumphant, the victorious.” There is no doubt that this object was dedicated to a Mamluk sultan, but scholars are not sure which one.
Provenance
Source
Tana Finance Inc.
- 1990-07-10
Related
Baron Alphonse Mayer von Rothschild
(1878 - 1942)
documented 1894
documented 1894
Former Collection
Alfred de Rothschild