Title: The musician Barbad conceals himself in a tree
Date: circa 1535
Location: Tabriz, Iran
Materials: ink, gold and opaque watercolour on paper; margins heavily sprinkled with gold
Dimensions: 47 x 31cm (folio); 27 x 17cm (written surface, verso); 32.2 x 26.8cm (illustration, maximum, recto)
Accession Number: MSS 1030 folio 731
Other Notes:
The musician Barbad, helped by the royal gardener Marduy, sneaks into the Shah’s Nawruz garden and conceals himself and his lute in a cypress tree, and watches the festivities. As darkness fell, he began to play his lute. Everyone, including the Shah, was entranced. They looked for the musician, even lighting torches, but in vain. Barbad plays another song, and then a third, after which he hears the Shah proclaim that once the minstrel is found he would be honoured as the minstrel of the Shah. This was music to Barbad’s ears: he leaps from the tree and falls at the Shah’s feet.
[For the Shahnamah of Shah Tahmasp, see MSS 1030]
Script:
text copied in a superior nasta‘liq script, with 22 lines to the page, arranged in 4 columns, two to a couplet; heading (on the verso) in riqa‘
Bibliography:
J.M. Rogers, The Arts of Islam. Masterpieces from the Khalili Collection, London 2010, cat.308, pp.268–9.
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