Estate Sale Score - Tell Me More!
May 13, 2018 8:13 AM Subscribe
Tell me more about the two, fetching equestrian paintings I bought at an estate sale. They are about 12x16 inches each, appear to be painted on glass panels, and have a little bit of writing in a language that I don’t know (but I would guess Arabic or Urdu). [pic1] [pic2]
I would also love to be pointed in the direction of other resources, or more info.
Here’s what we know:
- they were originally owned by a US diplomatic courier who appeared to have traveled or lived in Israel.
- they both have labels on the reverse from a Jahan Brothers Framing in Jerusalem. [Pic]
- I used to live in India, and the style looks much more like stuff I’ve seen there than stuff I’ve seen in Israel.
Full pictures of both paintings are here: [1] [2]
I would also love to be pointed in the direction of other resources, or more info.
Here’s what we know:
- they were originally owned by a US diplomatic courier who appeared to have traveled or lived in Israel.
- they both have labels on the reverse from a Jahan Brothers Framing in Jerusalem. [Pic]
- I used to live in India, and the style looks much more like stuff I’ve seen there than stuff I’ve seen in Israel.
Full pictures of both paintings are here: [1] [2]
Best answer: Antar ibn Shaddad was a knight as well as a poet; to win the right to marry Abla, he undertook a series of dramatic and adventuresome quests. It's a romantic and chivalrous tale, and has inspired later poets and storytellers -- it occupies a cultural place not dissimilar to that of Arthurian romance. Here is one (kind of Orientalist) telling, although traditionally the tale was told aloud. It's been made into a film at least once, too.
Antar and Abla are often depicted in paintings and illustrated manuscripts together on horseback, and I suspect your pieces are modern copies done in this older style. Here's an example, reverse-painted on glass. The cover art for the Westernised novel (circa 1978) is also similar in style. They would be an appealing subject for tourist-market art, so tracking down a specific artist or even tying your pieces to a specific place/time might be difficult.
posted by halation at 12:45 PM on May 13, 2018 [1 favorite]
Antar and Abla are often depicted in paintings and illustrated manuscripts together on horseback, and I suspect your pieces are modern copies done in this older style. Here's an example, reverse-painted on glass. The cover art for the Westernised novel (circa 1978) is also similar in style. They would be an appealing subject for tourist-market art, so tracking down a specific artist or even tying your pieces to a specific place/time might be difficult.
posted by halation at 12:45 PM on May 13, 2018 [1 favorite]
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posted by philotes at 10:39 AM on May 13, 2018