Learn/ Educators/ Curriculum Resources/ Art of the Islamic World/ Unit Seven: Trade and Artistic Exchange/ Chapter Two: Venice and the Islamic World/ Featured Works of Art: Images 45–46/ Image 45

Image 45

Lamp for the Mausoleum of Amir Aydakin al-'Ala'i al-Bunduqdar
Shortly after 1285
Egypt, probably Cairo
Glass, brownish; blown, folded foot, applied handles; enameled and gilded; 10 3/8 x 8 1/4 in. (26.4 x 21 cm)
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Gift of J. Pierpont Morgan, 1917 (17.190.985)

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KEY WORDS AND IDEAS
Trade, Venice and Egypt, Mamluks, calligraphy (thuluth script), lamp, blown glass

LINK TO THE THEME OF THIS CHAPTER
Venetians prized enameled glass objects produced in Egypt and Syria. They collected and emulated Mamluk glass, inspiring the local production of enamel-painted glass vessels in Venice.

FUNCTION
This enameled glass lamp was made for the mausoleum of a high-ranking Mamluk officer. It would have been suspended from an arch, lintel, vault, or dome by chains attached to the glass loops on the body, and filled with oil and a floating wick, which when lit would illuminate the lamp from within. In the days before electricity, these lamps were essential in providing light to the interiors of mosques and other buildings. One can imagine the visual effect of hundreds of such lamps hanging from chains, illuminating the interior of a mosque or tomb. (The Museum has re-created this effect in Gallery 454 with modern hanging lamps commissioned specifically for this space.)

DESCRIPTION/VISUAL ANALYSIS
This lamp features a semi-spherical body with a low foot and a wide opening. The enameled and gilded surface is decorated with three bands of calligraphy—one on the flare, one on the body, and a third on the underside of the vessel. The inscription on the body, which has been left unpainted, would have glowed when the lamp was lit. In addition to the calligraphic text, a pair of confronted bows set against a red circular ground appears nine times.

CONTEXT
This lamp provides insight into the court life of thirteenth-century Egypt. An inscription indicates the lamp was commissioned for the tomb of a high-ranking Mamluk officer who held the title "Keeper of the [Sultan's] Bow"; the blazon, or coat of arms, on this lamp features a crossbow, the symbol of his office.

The Venetians admired and imitated floral decorative elements popular in Egypt during the thirteenth through sixteenth centuries (fig. 57). Luxury items from the Islamic world were readily available as models, having come into Venetian collections through trade and as diplomatic gifts.

Fig. 57. Pilgrim flask, about 1500–1525; Italy, Venice; glass, colorless, nonlead; blown, enameled, gilt; H. 12 3/8 in. (31.4 cm); The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Robert Lehman Collection, 1975 (1975.1.1167)

This flat-sided bottle, called a pilgrim flask, is an example of a vessel produced in Venice after Islamic models, and reflects the transmission of artistic forms and techniques through trade. The scrolling floral elements, which form a medallion surrounded by a double pearl border, are evocative of motifs seen on gilded and painted glass from Syria and Egypt. The technique of enameled glass was highly prized by Venetian collectors. Responding to local demand, Venetian craftsmen imitated the forms and motifs of the foreign works of art.

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