Dado Panel – The Metropolitan Museum of Art https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/449149
New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1944. p. 90, ill. fig. 54 (b/w).
New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1944. p. 90, ill. fig. 54 (b/w).
The artist (possibly given to Andrieu); Pierre Andrieu (French)(until at least 1864); member of the Orléans family, possibly Philippe d’Orleans (French), comte de Paris, Château d’Eu, Normandy (by 1891-d
Robaut p. 355; Johnson VI, p. 303-4, no. 595; Huyghe pl. 311; Spector pp. 66-67;
Rorimer, James J., and Margaret B. Freeman.
Burlington Magazine 4 (January 1904), p. 94, ill. p. 92, as at Dowdeswell; accepts
Dado PanelThe room in Nishapur, Iran, from which this dado panel was excavated once had a lively scheme of painted decoration. The upper section of the wall was colored a deep red, beneath which was a short horizontal frieze of hexagons and diamonds, and a four-foot-high dado with alternating rectangular and square panels
Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin vol. 37 no. 4 (1942). p. 104, ill. fig. 28 (b
Hibeh, found in debris outside north wall of the town (Grenfell and Hunt 1906, p. – 106) 1902, excavated from the necropolis of Hibeh, Egypt, by Bernard P.
Hibeh, found in debris outside north wall of the town (Grenfell and Hunt 1906, p.
Bowl Produced in northeastern Iran, in the province of Khurasan during the Samanid period, this large bowl with its high, flaring sides and bold, rhythmically spaced inscription in „new-style“ script exemplifies the elegance and perfect harmony of the „black-on-white wares“ unearthed in the cities of Nishapur and Samarqand
Perpetual Glory: Medieval Islamic Ceramics from the Harvey B.
Cologne: Orbis Biblicus Et Orientalis, pl. 1 B. Kourotchkine, G.N. 1974.
the high altar of the church of San Domenico, Modena (until about 1708–10); John Edward Taylor, London (until d. 1905); his widow, Mrs. John E. Taylor, London (1905–12; her sale, Christie’s, London, July 5 and 8, 1912, no
B. W[ehle]. "The Michael Dreicer Collection."
P. Belmont, Newport (by 1904–d. 1908; by descent to his widow); Mrs. – P. Belmont, Newport and New York (1908–16; sold to Mackay); Clarence H
P. Belmont, Newport (by 1904–d. 1908; by descent to his widow); Mrs.