Medallion, tapestry, silk and gilded lamella of animal substrate spun around cotton

Iraq or western Iran; 1st half of 14th century
Diam: 69 cm
Inventory number 30/1995
Published in
Kjeld von Folsach, Torben Lundbæk and Peder Mortensen (eds.): Sultan, Shah and Great Mughal: the history and culture of the Islamic world, The National Museum, Copenhagen 1996, cat.no. 133;
Kjeld von Folsach: “Pax Mongolica : an Ilkhanid tapestry-woven roundel” in Hali, 85, March–April 1996, pp. 80–87, 117 : ill.;
Robert Hillenbrand: Islamic art and architecture, London 1999, fig. 159, p. 203;
Kjeld von Folsach: Art from the World of Islam in The David Collection, Copenhagen 2001, cat.no. 642;
Linda Komaroff and Stefano Carboni (eds.): The legacy of Genghis Khan: courtly art and culture in Western Asia, 1256-1353, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York 2002, fig. 195, p. 168, cat.no. 72, pp. 260-261;
Jutta Frings (ed.): Dschingis Khan und seine Erben: das Weltreich der Mongolen, Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Bonn 2005, cat.no. 329, pp. 287-288;
Sheila S. Blair and Jonathan M. Bloom (eds.): Cosmophilia. Islamic Art from the David Collection, Copenhagen, McMullen Museum of Art, Boston College, Boston 2006,cat.no. 3;
Kjeld von Folsach: For the Privileged Few: Islamic Miniature Painting from The David Collection, Louisiana,, Humlebæk 2007, p. 23, fig. 2;
Tanya Treptow and Donald Whitcomb: Daily life ornamented: the medieval Persian city of Rayy, Oriental Institute Museum of the University of Chicago, Chicago 2007, p. 21;
Yuka Kadoi: Islamic chinoiserie: the art of Mongol Iran, Edinburgh 2009, fig. 1.13, pp. 30-31;
Oliver Watson: “The case of the Ottoman table” in Journal of the David Collection, 2010, 3, fig. 28, p. 41;
Lorenz Korn: “A tubular bronze object from Khurasan” in Venetia Porter and Mariam Rosser-Owens (eds.): Metalwork and material culture in the Islamic world : art, craft and text : essays presented to James W. Allan, London 2012, note 13, p. 153 (no photo);
Kjeld von Folsach: “A set of silk panels from the Mongol period” in Sheila Blair and Jonathan Bloom (eds.): God is beautiful and loves beauty: the object in Islamic art and culture, New Haven 2013, p. 216, and p. 231, fig. 220;
Institute of Ismaili Studies: Encounters in Muslim History, Student reader 1, London 2013, (reprint. 2017), p. 210;
Louise W. Mackie: Symbols of power: luxury textiles from Islamic lands, 7th–21st century, Cleveland 2015, fig. 6.15, pp. 230-31;
Anne Dunlop: “Ornament and vice: the foreign, the mobile, and the Cocharelli fragments” in Gülru Necipoglu and Alina Paynes (eds.): Histories of ornament: from global to local, Princeton 2016, fig. 18.6, p. 234;
Kjeld von Folsach, Joachim Meyer: The Human Figure in Islamic Art – Holy Men, Princes, and Commoners, The David Collection, Copenhagen 2017, fig. 21, p. 66;
Susan Whitfield (ed.): Silk Roads: peoples, cultures, landscapes, London 2019, fig. 3, p. 17;
Eiren L. Shea: Mongol court dress, identity formation, and global exchange, Abingdon 2020, p. 135, fig. 5.6;
Robert Hillenbrand: The Great Mongol Shahnama, London 2022, fig. 7.9, p. 173; 

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