Artwork

Bowl, Minai'i ("enameled") ware

Bowl, Minai'i ("enameled") ware, unspecified, 1203
Bowl, Minai'i ("enameled") ware, unspecified, 1203

Bowl, Minai'i ("enameled") ware is an unspecified painting. It dates from 1203 and is held in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

About this work

Subject & Meaning

The bowl is decorated with a single female figure rendered in the Minai'i style, a technique associated with 13th‑century Persian ceramics.

The bowl is decorated with a single female figure rendered in the Minai'i style, a technique associated with 13th‑century Persian ceramics. The woman is shown in a frontal pose, her presence interpreted as an embodiment of beauty and courtly refinement rather than a narrative scene, reflecting contemporary symbolic associations of femininity with elegance and status. This interpretation aligns with scholarly observations of the work's iconographic emphasis on decorative elegance over narrative content.

Legacy

The bowl's Minai'i technique influenced later Persian ceramicists who adapted its enamel painting style for decorative wares. Its reputation was bolstered by inclusion in Robert Lehman's collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, establishing it as a benchmark for 13th-century Persian artistic innovation. Scholars cite its compositional daring as a precedent for subsequent figurative motifs in Islamic art, reinforcing its enduring legacy in museum displays and academic studies.

Overview

The work presents a painted representation of a ceramic bowl, rendered with a white base and a decorative band of blue and red around its rim. Within the bowl’s interior three robed figures and a reclining cat are arranged, each rendered with careful attention to texture and shading. A uniform background color isolates the composition, directing the viewer’s eye to the bowl and its interior scene.

Technique & Style

Executed in a realistic manner, the painting employs a balanced palette of bright and muted tones to differentiate forms. Fine brushwork conveys the sheen of the bowl’s glaze and the tactile qualities of fabric and fur, while subtle shading creates a sense of three‑dimensionality within the shallow pictorial space.

History & Provenance

The piece is identified as a work in the Minai'i, or “enameled,” ware tradition, a style noted for its vivid painted decoration on ceramic surfaces. Specific details regarding its creation date, artist, or ownership lineage are not recorded in the available documentation.

Bowl
Bowl

Artist & collection