cma-islamic-art: Tile Spandrel with Floral Sprays, c. 1570-1575, Cleveland Museum of Art: Islamic Ar
cma-islamic-art: Tile Spandrel with Floral Sprays, c. 1570-1575, Cleveland Museum of Art: Islamic ArtThis rare Turkish tile spandrel reveals the artistic and technical height achieved in Iznik, the town which manufactured tiles for imperial buildings of the Ottoman sultans, rulers of one of the largest, wealthiest, and most powerful empires in history (1270s-1924). Iznik tiles are renowned for their brilliant colors, especially the intense red - a technical triumph achieved with a thick slip. Here, it forms red roses - each petal executed with exemplary control - amidst prunus blossoms and intertwining leaves in the mature floral style. Such radiant floral sprays evoked eternal spring and visions of paradise. Originally this spandrel and its matching right half (now missing) formed a beautifully decorated arch over a niche, window, or doorway in Istanbul, Turkey.Size: Overall: 76 x 29.9 x 2.5 cm (29 15/16 x 11 ¾ x 1 in.)Medium: Fritware with red slip and underglaze-painted designhttps://clevelandart.org/art/2004.70 -- source link