Null Divân by Âsafî Heravî
Eastern Iran, Khorassan, probably Herat, Timurid or S…
Description

Divân by Âsafî Heravî Eastern Iran, Khorassan, probably Herat, Timurid or Safavid period, early 16th century Initial illuminated double page from a manuscript on paper, each laminated on a cardboard backing. Polychrome gouache, gold and black ink. Wide margin adorned with gilded arabesques and large frame decorated with floral motifs framing six text cartouches of a poem on love with an invocation to God, praying him to give satisfaction to a loving heart, in nasta'liq script arranged in staggered rows. Old no. 101 glued to the spine on the cardboard backing to which the two pages are attached. (Wear, double page separated, slight discoloration, margins slightly cut, pages laminated to cardboard backing. 27.4 x 17.2 cm and 27.7 x 16.8 cm Provenance: Former collection Mihran Sevadjian (1884- 1964 ?); Sale Maîtres G. Muel et E. Ader, Persian Art. Collection Sevadjian. 2nd sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, November 23, 1960, lot 101. Rare and beautiful double page of a poem by Âsafî Heravî. Âsafî Heravî, Âsaf b. Na'îm-al-dîn Ne'matallâh b. 'Alâ-al-dîn 'Ali Qohestânî, was a poet of the Timurid period, who died in 923H./1517. His father was the vizier of the Timurid sultan Abû Sa'îd (r. 1451-69) and his pen name Âsafî comes from the name Âsaf, a conventional title for a vizier. In Herat, he was a pupil of the great poet 'Abdal- Rahmân Jâmî (Jami) during the reign of the Shaybanid dynasty. He also lived part of his life in Shiraz and sometimes wore the Shîrazî nisba. His works include a mathnawî and over 400 gazals (lyric poems) totalling over 2,000 verses, collected in a Dîvân (Collected Poems) (Encyclopaedia Iranica, Âsafî Heravî, https: //iranicaonline.org/articles/asafi-heravi-asaf-b). This sumptuously illuminated double-page spread of a continuous poem corresponds to the very beginning of the first gazal of Âsafî Heravî's Dîvân, as the end of each distich ends with the letter alif. This Dîvân was probably copied just after the poet's death. ISLAMIC ARTS Rare set of 16th-century Safavid paintings and illuminations from the former Sevadjian collection (Lots 17 to 22) Mihran Sevadjian (1884-1964 ?) was an Armenian dealer in oriental art and archaeology, originally from Egypt and based in Paris near Drouot, successively at 19 rue Buffault, 37 rue de Châteaudun and 17 rue Le Peletier. He lent numerous works to the 1903 and 1907 Paris exhibitions of Muslim art, as well as to the 1910 Munich exhibition, and sold to museums, notably the Louvre. Part of his collection was sold at Drouot, Paris, on June 1, 1927 and April 13-14, 1932. His entire collection was subsequently sold at Drouot on November 23, 1960, April 18-20, 1961 and October 31, 1961, when Sevadjian was elderly and in financial difficulties. At the sale of November 23, 1960, which included the five lots shown below, the Musée du Louvre acquired nine miniatures (lots 2, 29, 33, 36, 150, 151, 52 and 154), now inventoried as MAO 367 to MAO 375. Several of these pages almost certainly came from the same albums (muraqqa') as those presented here. We would like to thank Francis Richard, Honorary Curator of the Bibliothèque Bibliothèque Nationale de Paris for his help in compiling these notes, and Armen Tokatlian, art historian, for his information on Sevadjian.

17 

Divân by Âsafî Heravî Eastern Iran, Khorassan, probably Herat, Timurid or Safavid period, early 16th century Initial illuminated double page from a manuscript on paper, each laminated on a cardboard backing. Polychrome gouache, gold and black ink. Wide margin adorned with gilded arabesques and large frame decorated with floral motifs framing six text cartouches of a poem on love with an invocation to God, praying him to give satisfaction to a loving heart, in nasta'liq script arranged in staggered rows. Old no. 101 glued to the spine on the cardboard backing to which the two pages are attached. (Wear, double page separated, slight discoloration, margins slightly cut, pages laminated to cardboard backing. 27.4 x 17.2 cm and 27.7 x 16.8 cm Provenance: Former collection Mihran Sevadjian (1884- 1964 ?); Sale Maîtres G. Muel et E. Ader, Persian Art. Collection Sevadjian. 2nd sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, November 23, 1960, lot 101. Rare and beautiful double page of a poem by Âsafî Heravî. Âsafî Heravî, Âsaf b. Na'îm-al-dîn Ne'matallâh b. 'Alâ-al-dîn 'Ali Qohestânî, was a poet of the Timurid period, who died in 923H./1517. His father was the vizier of the Timurid sultan Abû Sa'îd (r. 1451-69) and his pen name Âsafî comes from the name Âsaf, a conventional title for a vizier. In Herat, he was a pupil of the great poet 'Abdal- Rahmân Jâmî (Jami) during the reign of the Shaybanid dynasty. He also lived part of his life in Shiraz and sometimes wore the Shîrazî nisba. His works include a mathnawî and over 400 gazals (lyric poems) totalling over 2,000 verses, collected in a Dîvân (Collected Poems) (Encyclopaedia Iranica, Âsafî Heravî, https: //iranicaonline.org/articles/asafi-heravi-asaf-b). This sumptuously illuminated double-page spread of a continuous poem corresponds to the very beginning of the first gazal of Âsafî Heravî's Dîvân, as the end of each distich ends with the letter alif. This Dîvân was probably copied just after the poet's death. ISLAMIC ARTS Rare set of 16th-century Safavid paintings and illuminations from the former Sevadjian collection (Lots 17 to 22) Mihran Sevadjian (1884-1964 ?) was an Armenian dealer in oriental art and archaeology, originally from Egypt and based in Paris near Drouot, successively at 19 rue Buffault, 37 rue de Châteaudun and 17 rue Le Peletier. He lent numerous works to the 1903 and 1907 Paris exhibitions of Muslim art, as well as to the 1910 Munich exhibition, and sold to museums, notably the Louvre. Part of his collection was sold at Drouot, Paris, on June 1, 1927 and April 13-14, 1932. His entire collection was subsequently sold at Drouot on November 23, 1960, April 18-20, 1961 and October 31, 1961, when Sevadjian was elderly and in financial difficulties. At the sale of November 23, 1960, which included the five lots shown below, the Musée du Louvre acquired nine miniatures (lots 2, 29, 33, 36, 150, 151, 52 and 154), now inventoried as MAO 367 to MAO 375. Several of these pages almost certainly came from the same albums (muraqqa') as those presented here. We would like to thank Francis Richard, Honorary Curator of the Bibliothèque Bibliothèque Nationale de Paris for his help in compiling these notes, and Armen Tokatlian, art historian, for his information on Sevadjian.

Auction is over for this lot. See the results

You may also like

Benjamin Netanyahu Signed Typescript of 2015 UN General Assembly Speech Typed speech made by Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the UN General Assembly on October 1, 2015, 15 pages, 8.5 x 11, signed and inscribed at the top of the first page in blue ink, “To Samuel Kloda, Best wishes, BN.” The speech, which focuses primarily on criticizing the Iran nuclear deal and highlighting the threats posed by Iran to Israel and the broader Middle East, reads, in part: “After three days of listening to world leaders praise the nuclear deal with Iran, I begin my speech today by saying: Ladies and Gentlemen, check your enthusiasm at the door. You see, this deal doesn’t make peace more likely. By fueling Iran’s aggressions with billions of dollars in sanctions relief, it makes war more likely. Just look at what Iran has done in the last six months alone, since the framework agreement was announced in Lausanne. Iran boosted its supply of devastating weapons to Syria. Iran sent more soldiers of its Revolutionary Guard into Syria. Iran sent thousands of Afghani and Pakistani Shi’ite fighters to Syria. Iran did all this to prop up Assad’s brutal regime. Iran also shipped tons of weapons and ammunitions to the Houthi rebels in Yemen, including another shipment just two days ago...Iran also made clear its plans to open two new terror fronts against Israel, promising to arm Palestinians in the West Bank and sending its Revolutionary Guard generals to the Golan Heights, from which its operatives recently fired rockets on northern Israel. Israel will continue to respond forcefully to any attacks against it from Syria. Israel will continue to act to prevent the transfer of strategic weapons to Hezbollah from and through Syrian territory.” In fine condition.