Page of Calligraphy in Ornamental Style
| Support Type: | Paper |
| Paint Type: | Ink |
| Current Location: | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
The Artwork "page of calligraphy in ornamental style"was produced by Malik Muhammad Qazvini during the period 1868-69 in present day Iran.Rather than painting and figures or landscape Qazvini has illustrated an sacred and devotional phrase invoking peace and blessing upon the most beloved messanger of Allah Prophet Muhammad.He has composed an antique form of of Kufic script that had been popular centuries earlier, but he reworked it for a nineteenth-century audience by adding decorative flourishes with each letters sprouting small floral tips, and their outlines are traced with dots for extra visual texture.Below this central inscription is a smaller note written in a looser, cursive shikasta hand not as a part of the devotional text itself but functions more like a signature block, it identifies Qazvini as the calligrapher, names the work's intended recipient, a friend called Mirza Musa, and records the completion date.Scholars of Islamic epigraphy has traced the floriated and foliated Kufic style by Qazvini to the 10th and 11th centuries, when plain, angular early Kufic began to be elaborated with leaf-tipped strokes and independent floral sprigs growing from the letters and the spaces between them.like By 1800s, it ceased to be a simple everyday writing and instead become an antiquarian, ornamental register, deliberately archaic, deployed precisely because it signaled continuity with early Islamic monumental tradition. Maryam Ekhtiar, curator of Islamic Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the leading specialist on 19th Persian calligraphy, has argued that Qajar-era calligraphy should be read through the double lens of innovation and revivalism simultaneously. The Museum's thematic essay on the period frames Qajar visual culture generally as balancing two divergent but intertwined impulses on one side a push toward modernity and technological change, and the other side a conscious revival of older, indigenous artistic and dynastic references meant to give legitimacy to the new ruling class of that period and Qazvini's artwork is a compact illustration of this exact dynamic. He is not merely repeating a medieval script; he is consciously reviving it, adding fresh ornamental invention as seen in the dotted outlines and the floral terminals on top of an already centuries-old decorative tradition.
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