Culture: Indian, HinduMaterials/Techniques: brassNote: General note: Lowe Art Museum, "Change and Continuity. Fold and Tribal Art of India." U. of Miami, 2004.
Culture: PersianNote: General note: A copy of this photo can be found at the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography, St. Petersburg, Russia (Kunstkamera), accession No. 2590-29.
Culture: PersianNote: General note: A copy of this photo can be found at the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography, St. Petersburg, Russia (Kunstkamera), accession No. 2590-74.
Culture: PersianNote: General note: A copy of this photo can be found at the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography, St. Petersburg, Russia (Kunstkamera), accession No. 3194-27.
Culture: Islamic, PersianMaterials/Techniques: oil (substance), paperNote: General note: Based on a drawing by A. D. Soltykov, who accompanied the Russian mission to Persia, depicting himself drawing the Prince on a visit to Tabriz in 1838. The image was also a plate in Soltykov's Voyage en Perse (1851).
Culture: Islamic, PersianMaterials/Techniques: oil (substance), paperNote: General note: Based on a drawing by A. D. Soltykov, who accompanied the Russian mission to Persia, depicting himself drawing the Prince on a visit to Tabriz in 1838. The image was also a plate in Soltykov's Voyage en Perse (1851).
Culture: PersianNote: General note: A copy of this photo can be found at the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography, St. Petersburg, Russia (Kunstkamera), accession No. 3194-18.
Culture: PersianNote: General note: A copy of this photo can be found at the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography, St. Petersburg, Russia (Kunstkamera), accession No. 3194-15.
613 folios, 44 miniatures, of which 15 are copies of Baysunghur Shahnama (Gulistan, ms. 716). Originally thought to be Timurid revival in the Safavid period, but the chemical analysis showed 19th c.Culture: Islamic, PersianMaterials/Techniques: opaque watercolor, ink, gold, paperNote: General note: Part of the Spencer Collection
613 folios, 44 miniatures, of which 15 are copies of Baysunghur Shahnama (Gulistan, ms. 716). Originally thought to be Timurid revival in the Safavid period, but the chemical analysis showed 19th c.Culture: Islamic, PersianMaterials/Techniques: opaque watercolor, ink, gold, paperNote: General note: Part of the Spencer Collection