Sultan Mohammed

Bahram Gur in the White Pavilion, Khamsa of Nizami. Sultan Mohammed circa 1505, Tabriz (Topkapi H. 762).
The Mir'aj of Prophet Muhammad, Khamsa of Nizami. Sultan Mohammed circa 1505, Tabriz (Keir Collection, III. 207)

Sultan Mohammad (Persian: سلطان محمد) was an Iranian painter at the Safavid court in Tabriz under Shah Ismail I (r. 1501–1524) and Shah Tahmasp I (r. 1524–1576). He served as the director of Shah Ismail's artists’ workshop[1]: 31  and as the first project director of the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp.[2] He gave painting lessons to Tahmasp when he was the crown prince.[1]: 34 

Around 1505, while in Tabriz, Sultan Mohammed was asked by Ismail I (r. 1501-24) to complete a Turkoman manuscript, the Khamsa of Nizami (Tabriz, 1481), with eleven new miniatures.[3][4][5] The miniatures created by Sultan Mohammed are on folios 12, 38v, 46, 89 v, 192, 196, 233, 244 and 285 of the manuscript.[6] The criteria used to differentiate the Safavid miniatures from the Turkoman ones in this manuscript is for a great part iconographic, as the protagonists in Sultan Mohammed's paintings generally wear Shah Isma'il's signature turban, the Taj-i Haydari, which he introduced when he occupied Tabriz in 1501-1502.[6]

Sultan Mohammad’s style was initially based in the Turkman courtly idiom.[1]: 34  Sheila R. Canby writes that around 1515, he was perfecting scenes of “man and animal inhabiting a natural world of roaring winds, lush and frenzied vegetation and rocks resembling grotesque faces”,[7] of which his painting “Rustam Sleeping while Rakhsh Fights a Lion” from an unfinished Shahnameh is an example. In the 1520s however, Sultan Mohammad was influenced by the more sedate and subtle late Timurid mode practiced at Herat; his compositions became more orderly and architectonic.

Sultan Mohammad’s painting “The Court of Gayumars” is widely considered the “crowning achievement” of the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp.[1]: 50  It has been estimated that the artist worked on the painting for three years.[1]: 51  In 1544, Dust Muhammad described it as “such that the lion-hearted of the jungle of depiction and the leopards and crocodiles of the workshop of ornamentation quail at the fangs of his pen and bend their necks before the awesomeness of his pictures,” making it one of the few individual paintings to be referenced in any sixteenth century text.[1]: 51 

Other than the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp, Sultan Mohammad may have contributed to an illustrated manuscript of the Story of Jamal and Jalal of Muhammad Asafi that was copied by the scribe Sultan Ali Qayini in 1502–3 at Herat but then travelled west.[1]: 29, 31  He was also among the few distinguished artists to contribute to an illustrated manuscript of the Khamseh of Nizami that was copied by the scribe Shah Mahmud of Nishapur at Tabriz and produced between 1539 and 1543.[1]: 52–53  Furthermore, he decorated the borders of many other fine Safavid manuscripts.[1]: 57–58 

Sultan Mohammad was a native of Tabriz.[1]: 31  He was the father of the artist Mirza Ali, who also contributed to the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp, and the grandfather of the painter and illuminator Mir Zayn al-'Abidin, who was active in the last quarter of the sixteenth century.[1]: 51  He died before 1555.[1]: 72 

Sources

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  • Blair, Sheila S.; Bloom, Jonathan M. (25 September 1996). The Art and Architecture of Islam 1250-1800. Yale University Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-0-300-06465-0.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Canby, Sheila R. (2000). The Golden Age of Persian Art, 1501–1722. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. pp. 22–65. ISBN 0-8109-4144-9.
  2. ^ Sussan Babaie. "Sussan Babaie: Looking at Persian Painting". HENI Talks.
  3. ^ Blair & Bloom 1996, p. 68.
  4. ^ Sims, Eleanor; Marshak, Boris Ilʹich; Grube, Ernst J.; I, Boris Marshak (1 January 2002). Peerless Images: Persian Painting and Its Sources. Yale University Press. p. 151. ISBN 978-0-300-09038-3.
  5. ^ Curatola, Giovanni (2018). Iran: arte islamica. Milano: Jaca book. p. 209, note 90. ISBN 978-88-16-60569-5.
  6. ^ a b Stchoukine, Ivan (1966). "Les peintures turcomanes et ṣafavies d'une Khamseh de Niẓâmî achevée à Tabrîz en 886/1481". Arts Asiatiques. 14 (1): 4. doi:10.3406/arasi.1966.955.
  7. ^ Canby, Sheila R. (2000). The Golden Age of Persian Art, 1501–1722. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. p. 31. ISBN 0-8109-4144-9. By about 921/1515 the idiom of man and animal inhabiting a natural world of roaring winds, bush and frenzied vegetation and rocks ressembling grotesque faces was being hones by the director of Shah Isma'il's artists' workshop, Sultan Muhammad
  8. ^ ""The Feast of Sada", Folio 22v from the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved November 28, 2022.
  9. ^ ""Tahmuras Defeats the Divs", Folio 23v from the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved November 28, 2022.
  10. ^ ""Zahhak is Told His Fate", Folio 29v from the Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved November 28, 2022.