Musa va 'Uj
Musa va 'Uj | |
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The Giant ‘Uj and the Prophets Moses, Jesus and Muhammad | |
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Year | 15th century |
Medium | Ink, gold, silver and opaque watercolour on paper |
Dimensions | 25.6 cm × 16 cm (10.1 in × 6.3 in) |
Owner | Khalili Collection of Islamic Art |
Website | MSS 620 |
Musa va 'Uj (
Physical description
The manuscript folio is 38 centimetres (15 in) high and 24.8 centimetres (9.8 in) wide. The painting is mostly contained within a rectangle 25.6 centimetres (10.1 in) high and 16 centimetres (6.3 in) wide, with elements extending beyond the border at the top and left. It is done in ink, opaque watercolour paint and gold and silver. There are markings on the back by previous owners, though they are almost entirely smudged and illegible.[2]
Composition
The scene presents its figures among blossoming trees and other foliage under an intensely blue sky. The top half of the painting is dominated by
History
Basil William Robinson attributed the painting to an artist he calls "the Gulistan painter" who contributed miniature paintings to a Kalīla wa-Dimna manuscript that is in the Gulistan Imperial Library in Tehran.[4] Giti Norouzian found many stylistic differences between Musa va 'Uj and the Kalīla wa-Dimna miniatures and concluded they were the work of different artists with common influences.[1]
According to J. M. Rogers, the painting was created in the early 15th century in either Baghdad or Tabriz.[3] Later research by Eleanor Sims, editor of the journal Islamic Art, locates its creation to between 1460 and 1465 in either Tabriz or Shiraz.[2] It is not known what manuscript it was part of, though it may have originally been the right-hand half of a frontispiece for Qisas al-Anbiya' (Stories of the Prophets).[3][1] It was at one stage extracted from its original manuscript, mounted on card, and included in an album.[2][5] It was first documented in the late 1930s in A Survey of Persian Art from Prehistoric Times to the Present by Pope and Ackerman[6][2] and was acquired decades later by the Khalili Collection of Islamic Art (accession number MSS 620). It has been included in public exhibitions of the Khalili Collection, including in Abu Dhabi and Russia.[2] The collector Sir David Khalili cited the painting as an example of how art can promote unity between faiths.[7]
Interpretation
![Refer to caption](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/77/Khalili_Collection_Islamic_Art_mss_0620_crop_Mary.jpg/220px-Khalili_Collection_Islamic_Art_mss_0620_crop_Mary.jpg)
Two other paintings from the same period show Muhammad seated among his successor caliphs, his grandsons, and Bilal in a similar configuration. Unlike these, Musa va 'Uj does not include angels in the group. In combining this group with figures from Christianity and Judaism, it is thought to be unique.[2]
Ernst Kühnel described the painting as "a kind of religious trilogy".[2] Basil William Robinson described it as an allegory of the three Abrahamic religions.[4] Other paintings from the period 1250 to 1500 AD gave Muhammad physical features, unlike Musa va 'Uj which shows him veiled and with a nimbus of golden flame. This suggests that the artist's intent was to emphasise Muhammad's status as a prophet rather than his physical reality.[1] Eleanor Sims argues that the other figures seated with the Virgin Mary are meant to be the Apostles. Her interpretation is that by presenting Christian and Jewish prophets in the background and Muhammad with companions in the foreground surrounded by golden flame, it emphasises the status of Muhammad as the "Seal of the Prophets": the last of the prophets sent by God.[2]
See also
References
- ^ from the original on 28 February 2023. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
- ^ ISBN 9781874780809.
- ^ OCLC 455121277.
- ^ ISBN 9780814774175. Archivedfrom the original on 24 April 2023. Retrieved 31 March 2023.
- ISBN 9783791330556.
- OCLC 198805985.
- from the original on 28 February 2023. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
External links
- The Giant ‘Uj and the Prophets Moses, Jesus and Muhammad, Khalili Collections online catalogue