Antique
Persian Pottery
Persia and neighbouring countries
In Persia and other Near East countries pottery
had been made for many centuries, and while the majority
of Europe was in a state of barbarism, attractive
wares were being made with brilliantly coloured
glazes and with designs incised or painted. The Persians
rediscovered the art of tin-glazing, a technique
used by the Assyrians, and were masters in the use
of coloured lustres by the end of the twelfth century.
Both of these processes reached Europe later by way
of the Moors in Spain.
Many types of Chinese wares were exported to the
Near East countries, and there was a constant interchange
of ideas; the Chinese learned of painting in underglaze
blue from the Persian potters at Kashan, and the
Persians made imitations of their favourite Chinese
celadon glazes. Following the important Persian Exhibition
held in London in 1931, scholars have turned their
attention to the earlier wares, and attempts are
being made to trace a sequence of styles and to discover
exactly where the various types were made.
Excavations carried out at the end of the nineteenth
century first revealed the beauty of these Islamic
wares which had then been long forgotten. Ironically,
beautiful as so many of them are, most have been
restored from fragments found discarded in rubbish-pits
in Persia and Egypt. Good examples are, understandably,
rare, and poor ones skillfully made up from two or
more articles with a generous helping of plaster
and paint are to be guarded against.
Most of the wares made in Persian and nearby pottery
centres from the fourteenth century onwards are versions
of earlier types and show less originality. Imitations
of Ming blue-and-white, with thick glaze and a very
runny blue, are sometimes mistaken for Chinese.
To the north-west of Persia, in Turkey, a distinctive
pottery was made. It has a sandy body coated with
white slip, decorated with painting of formal floral
or leaf patterns outlined in black and coloured in
a distinctive thick red, bright green and blue. It
dates from about the sixteenth century. This ware
was once thought to be of Persian origin, later said
to have come from the Island of Rhodes and known
as 'Rhodian' ware, but is now accepted as having
been made principally at Isnik, a town to the south
of Istanbul.
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