1857-1858
In this unfinished painting, the sitter kneels within a shallow space and faces the viewer with a penetrating gaze. Although European fashions had entered Persian clothing and furniture by the middle of the nineteenth century (painting dated 1274 H. (1857-1858)), this figure’s garments and posture are staunchly traditional. He wears the tall Astrakhan hat favored by the Qajar court and two long robes. The outer cloak is broadly sketched in, but the blue inner robe is carefully rendered in a moiré pattern. The details of the striped sash and the complicated piping on the robes suggest the fine woolen fabrics woven in Kirman, which Qajar government policy aimed to promote over Kashmir imports at the time this painting was created. The sitter’s two hands—with henna-stained nails—are tucked into his sash, along with two rolled documents.
31.8 x 19.5 cm (12 1/2 x 7 11/16 in.)
Kazem R. Kooros, Houston, Texas (by 1969), gift; to his son Vahid Kooros, Houston, Texas (by 1979), gift; to the Harvard Art Museums, 2015. Note: Kazem R. Kooros (1906-2010) was a major collector of Qajar art. He purchased works of art on the international art market from the 1950s through the 1980s.
Oil on canvas
19th-20th centuryFrenchTempera on panel
15th centuryItalian
Oil on canvas
20th centuryAustrianOil on canvas
20th centuryFrench
Oil on canvas
20th centuryAmericanTwo-panel folding screen; ink, color and gold on paper
18th centuryJapanese
Oil on canvas
20th centuryAmerican
Oil on canvas
20th centuryAmericanSingle-sheet drawing mounted as a hanging scroll; ink on paper
12th centuryJapaneseOne from a set of twenty-four album leaves; ink on paper; with signature in clerical script (lishu) reading "Li Junyi 05"
21st centuryChineseOil on wood panel
19th centuryAmericanOil on panel
17th centuryDutch