2. Eight-pointed Star-Shaped Tile, second half 13th–14th century, Iran
decorated using a method called lajvardina, a term that references lapis lazuli, & would have been part of a star-and-cross panel adorning the walls of an Ilkhanid palace, mosque, or mausoleum.
5. Eighth-pointed star tile, c. 1261–62, Kashan, Ilkhanid period, 13th century
Luster tiles such as this one, with their metallic glaze, lined the walls of religious & secular buildings, reflecting a golden incandescence. Possibly from interior of Imamzada Yahya shrine.
9. Eight-pointed star tile, 1266 Iran, Kashan, Ilkhanid period, 13th century
Luster Wall Tile with a Couple. Around the edge is a border inscription with poem. Tiles such tiles like this were used to decorate the interior walls of palaces & buildings.
11. Eight-pointed Star Tile, 13th-14th century, Iran, Ilkhanid Period
Depicting a deer & with a border & inscription, would have formed one unit of a star & cross tile dado embellishing a Sufi shrine. Texts from 12th-century mystic poet Awhad al-Din Kirmani
12. Eight-pointed Star Tile, 13th-14th century, Iran, Ilkhanid Period
Glazed, stone-paste, underglaze-painted, overglaze-painted luster. Tiles such tiles like this were used to decorate the interior walls of buildings & palaces.
13. Eight-pointed Star Tile, 1201-1300, Iran, Ilkhanid Period
Tiles with dragons were found at Takht-i Sulayman, the summer palace constructed in the 1270s for Abaqa, the Mongol Ilkhan. Tiles like this were used to decorate the interior walls of buildings.
The Ottoman court became invested in writing its own history.
The court historian (şehnameci), a new position established in the 1550s, set to work producing manuscripts with illustrations.
Sultan Murad III (r. 1574-1595) in his Library @harvartmuseums
Safavid…
The best artists from across the empire were brought together & under the direction of Bihzad, the famed miniaturist from Herat, and formed a new Safavid style of painting.