File:Oil painting on canvas. ‘An Afro-Iranian Soldier’, Iran, Isfahan; last quarter of the 17th century.jpg

Original file (5,043 × 7,808 pixels, file size: 4.87 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Summary

‘An Afro-Iranian Soldier’
Artist
anonymous
Unidentified painter  
 
Description 18th-century portrait paintings of men, with Not identified, Unspecified, Unmentioned, Unattributed, UnknownUnknown or anonymous artist
label QS:Len,"Not identified, Unspecified, Unmentioned, Unattributed, UnknownUnknown or anonymous artist"
label QS:Lpt,"Não identificado, Não especificado, Não mencionado, Não atribuído, UnknownUnknown ou artista anonymous"
and missing location and year.
Title
‘An Afro-Iranian Soldier’
Description
English: Iran, Isfahan; last quarter of the 17th century

The young, black soldier wearing his hat at a rakish angle is well armed. Across his shoulder he carries a matchlock gun, its long fuse extending from and wrapped around the butt of the gun. A fire striker used to ignite the fuse hangs from a hook on his narrow belt. The white, circular container and a similar dark one behind it on his right side presumably held the two types of gunpowder used for such a gun. He also carries a sabre and a dagger, and while his lower legs may appear to be clad in striped socks, they are in fact covered in puttees.

In the background we see a pigeon tower of the type built in large numbers in and around Isfahan from the beginning of the seventeenth century to produce fertiliser for agriculture.

The Soldier belongs to a small group of a total of twenty-four known Safavid oil paintings from approximately 1650–1725. In terms of format and subject matter, they have a strong kinship with murals from the same period, several of which still adorn princely palaces in Isfahan and Armenian houses in nearby New Julfa. These paintings depict figures, are often created as pairs, and show an ethnically, religiously and socially varied gallery of characters that presumably reflects real-life Isfahan at the time.

Several figures appear in Europeanised interiors, others are depicted in relatively empty landscapes which still, due to the use of perspective, reveal an European influence. All in all, these relatively large formats are a result of the impact of European painting, which also found expression within the much smaller formats of the period’s miniature painting (162/2006).

The depictions include slaves, such as Georgians holding bottles, ready to pour wine for their masters. In all likelihood, the black soldier shown in 7/2021 was in a similar position: a slave soldier attached to the Safavid army’s special corps of musketeers.
Date fourth quarter of 17th century
date QS:P571,+1650-00-00T00:00:00Z/7
Medium oil on canvas
medium QS:P186,Q296955;P186,Q12321255,P518,Q861259
Dimensions height: 122 cm (48 in); width: 79.5 cm (31.2 in)
dimensions QS:P2048,122U174728
dimensions QS:P2049,79.5U174728
UnknownUnknown
Accession number
Inv. no. 7/2021
Source/Photographer https://www.davidmus.dk/en/collections/islamic/dynasties/safavids/art/7-2021

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current00:52, 16 April 2022Thumbnail for version as of 00:52, 16 April 20225,043 × 7,808 (4.87 MB)LouisAragonUploaded a work by Davidmus.dk from https://www.davidmus.dk/en/collections/islamic/dynasties/safavids/art/7-2021 with UploadWizard

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