Location: Kashan, Iran
Materials: stonepaste ware, decorated in lustre over an opaque white glaze
Dimensions: 39.5 x 25 x 13cm
Accession Number: POT 857
Other Notes:
The dromedary, which is a vase, bears on its hump a smaller vase, with openings at the shoulders for additional sprays of blossom. The lustre decoration includes the trappings and a saddlecloth, as well as a medallion with a harpy.
Lustrewares produced in the town of Kashan from the late 12th century onwards may well have been introduced by itinerant craftsmen from Fatimid Egypt or Ayyubid Syria. It is now generally agreed that they represent the work of different kilns within the town, produced over a continuous period of more than a century. Throughout this time, the town appears to have successfully maintained its monopoly and exported little if anything westwards to Anatolia, Syria or Egypt: finds outside the borders of present-day Iran (for example, in Central Asia or Afghanistan) have also been very few.
Bibliography:
E.J. Grube et al, Cobalt and Lustre. The First Centuries of Islamic Pottery, The Nasser D Khalili Collection of Islamic Art, volume IX, London 1994, cat.267, pp.236–7.
J.M. Rogers, The Arts of Islam. Masterpieces from the Khalili Collection, London 2010, cat.129, pp.114–15.