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Mina’i is a modern collectors’ term for ceramics made in Iran during the late 12th to early 13th centuries. The term mina’i, translates as “enamelled” in Persian, designating the colored glass pigments used to paint detailed figural decoration on vessels or tiles, which were then fixed on the ceramic base by multiple firings. The use of a wide range of colors, including turquoise, red, green, purple, and black, also led these types of ceramics to be called by the Persian term “haft rang,” or “seven colors.”This bowl is a type of mina’i ware called “lavjardina,” a term derived from the Persian word for the blue stone lapis lazuli (lavjard). Rather firing colors on a white background, lavjardina ceramics glazed color over a dark blue base. The patterning on this bowl incorporates a pattern of vegetal scrolls forming a central diamond.
Page data
- Page
- 4
- Source index
- 0
- Type
- photo
- Media ID
- e1f5d31eb42170ed
- Size
- unknown
Document data
- ID
- 25982
- Core
- obj
- Type
- object
DTO data
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"title": "Bowl with Vegetal Scrolls",
"description": "Mina’i is a modern collectors’ term for ceramics made in Iran during the late 12th to early 13th centuries. The term mina’i, translates as “enamelled” in Persian, designating the colored glass pigments used to paint detailed figural decoration on vessels or tiles, which were then fixed on the ceramic base by multiple firings. The use of a wide range of colors, including turquoise, red, green, purple, and black, also led these types of ceramics to be called by the Persian term “haft rang,” or “seven colors.”This bowl is a type of mina’i ware called “lavjardina,” a term derived from the Persian word for the blue stone lapis lazuli (lavjard). Rather firing colors on a white background, lavjardina ceramics glazed color over a dark blue base. The patterning on this bowl incorporates a pattern of vegetal scrolls forming a central diamond.",
"provenance": "Walters Collection",
"date": "late 12th-early 13th century (Seljuq (?))",
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}
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Document identity
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"label": "Bowl with Vegetal Scrolls",
"core": "obj",
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Document source metadata
{
"id": "25982",
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"contentType": "object",
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"title": "Bowl with Vegetal Scrolls",
"description": "Mina’i is a modern collectors’ term for ceramics made in Iran during the late 12th to early 13th centuries. The term mina’i, translates as “enamelled” in Persian, designating the colored glass pigments used to paint detailed figural decoration on vessels or tiles, which were then fixed on the ceramic base by multiple firings. The use of a wide range of colors, including turquoise, red, green, purple, and black, also led these types of ceramics to be called by the Persian term “haft rang,” or “seven colors.”This bowl is a type of mina’i ware called “lavjardina,” a term derived from the Persian word for the blue stone lapis lazuli (lavjard). Rather firing colors on a white background, lavjardina ceramics glazed color over a dark blue base. The patterning on this bowl incorporates a pattern of vegetal scrolls forming a central diamond.",
"provenance": "Walters Collection",
"date": "late 12th-early 13th century (Seljuq (?))",
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Document source extras
{
"cul": "Islamic",
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Page context
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