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IG_2: Stucco and glass window with cypress tree surrounded by a flower tendril
(FRA_Paris_MuseeDuLouvre_IG_2)

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Title

Stucco and glass window with a cypress tree surrounded by a flower tendril

Type of Object
Dimensions
58.5 x 36 x 2.4 cm
Artist / Producer
Place of Manufacture
Dating
Late 13th–early 14th centuries AH / late 19th century CE
Location
Inventory Number
OA 7466/2
Research Project
Author and Date of Entry
Francine Giese, Sophie Wolf 2024

Iconography

Description

The design of this stucco and glass window consists of a green cypress tree surrounded by an S-shaped curved flower tendril, with tulips, lilies and roses. A flower stem with a rose, a lily, and red carnation adorns the lower right corner; red and yellow flowers decorate the inner side of the semicircular arch framing the motif. Two eight-petalled flowers are set in the spandrels above the arch. The cypress tree and the flowers are worked out in relief against a perforated background that lies c.10mm below the surface.

The latticework is painted with a light-brown colour and a dark varnish (see Research).

The window has been restored and is preserved without its original wooden frame (see Technique and Research).

Iconclass Code
25G3(CYPRESS) · trees: cypress
25G4(PEONY) · plants and herbs: peony
25G41(LILY) · flowers: lily
25G41(ROSE) · flowers: rose
25G41(TULIP) · flowers: tulip
48A98783 · floral interlace ~ ornament
Iconclass Keywords
barley · cypress · flower · lily · lotus · mint-plant · peony · rose · tulip

Materials, Technique and State of Preservation

Materials

Gypsum plaster; colourless glass; coloured glass (green, blue, two shades of yellow, and red flashed glass); ochre-coloured paint; varnish.

Technique

Stucco panels are produced according to the traditional production technique described by several authors (for example, Foy, 2005, pp. 152–154), by pouring gypsum plaster into a frame, which is usually made of wood and has a hollow profile. The design is usually transferred to the stucco panel using stencils and then carved as an openwork relief using various tools (gouge, serrated knife, chisel, file, etc.). Depending on the height and position of the window In the room, the openings are tapered and oriented in such a way that they direct light towards the viewer. The individual openings are then covered with pieces of transparent colourless or coloured sheet glass on the flat, rear of the panel; sometimes one glass piece covers several smaller holes. The pieces are fixed to the stucco panel by being embedded in a thin layer of gypsum plaster. Stucco and glass windows are usually mounted in window openings in their wooden frames, with the sculpted side facing the inside of the room.

The object described here is not framed. According to a detailed examination (Bailly et al., 2008), all but one of the stucco and glass windows (OA 7466/39, IG 168) in the Delort de Gléon Collection were removed from their wooden frames at an unknown date. The lack of round profiles to the now straight edges of the c.20-mm-thick stucco lattice corroborates this hypothesis.

The plaster layer fixing the pieces of glass to the back of the panel Is 2–3mm thick. There are two types of plaster, a greyish one (probably original) and a white one (probably repair material). Underneath the pieces of glass, in the area around the openings, there are traces of a brown, shiny substance exhibiting a craquelure; we assume that these are the remains of an animal or vegetable glue that was used to fix the pieces of glass and prevent them from being displaced while pouring the embedding stucco.

The latticework is laid out on two levels: the main design (level 0) was carved out of the stucco panel using a sharp, knife-like tool and following the lines of a preliminary drawing incised in the surface of the panel. The second level (level –1), which lies c.10mm below level 0, shows irregularly spaced, conical perforations with diameters of c.5mm. The holes seem to have been pierced – rather than drilled – into the still soft (not fully set) stucco using a metal or wooden nail or pin. They are slightly tapered towards the back. The distances between the holes range between 1 and 8mm. The main design and the perforations have been worked in such a way that the incident light is directed downwards, indicating that the window was made to be positioned in the upper part of the wall. At an unknown date, the front of the latticework was painted with an ochre-coloured paint and subsequently with a brown varnish.

The pieces of glass are of both colourless and coloured glass. The colourless glass sometimes has a greenish or greyish tint. Flashed glass, that is, glass composed of a thicker layer of transparent glass and a thinner layer of strongly coloured material, has been used for the red pieces, and maybe also for the dark-blue ones (see Bailly et al., 2008, p. 10). Some of the pieces of glass show small, elongated bubbles characteristic of mouth-blown sheet glass, probably produced using the broad-sheet method. The pieces of glass were cut according to the design of the latticework using a diamond cutter, which left scratch marks on some of them. The coloured pieces of glass are slightly thicker (1–1.5mm) than the colourless ones (0.5–1mm). The coloured glass has been used for the floral design at level 0; the small round holes at level –1 are backed with both colourless and yellow glass (the latter along the borders of the panel).

State of Preservations and Restorations

The stucco and glass window is preserved without its original wooden frame and is in good condition: the latticework is intact, and there are no glass losses.

According to the results of an in-depth examination of the stucco and glass windows of the Delort de Gléon Collection carried out in 2008, this, as well as the other windows from the collection, have been restored five times since their acquisition in Cairo (Bailly et al., 2008, pp. 16–25).

The most recent restoration was carried out after this detailed examination, in 2009–2010 (Fellinger et al., 2022). During restoration, defects and losses in the stucco lattice were filled with white stucco plaster and missing glass was replaced. The new pieces of glass are embedded in a thin layer of off-white plaster on the back of the stucco grille. There are remains of the original grey embedding layer, which is more grainy and less pure than the repair plaster.

History

Research

From a technical and iconographic point of view, this stucco and glass window corresponds to one of the standard types of qamariyya widespread in Egypt during the Ottoman period. Similar windows can be found in several of the collections studied (see for instance IG_18, IG_173, IG_355). The representation of a cypress tree surrounded by a flower tendril is a widespread motif in Islamic arts. It can also be found in numerous other media, such as ceramics, wood panelling, wall paintings, and textiles, over a long period of time, and in both sacred and profane contexts.

Stucco and glass windows of this type are illustrated in 19th- and early 20th-century publications (see for instance IG_42, IG_47). The cypress tree motif also aroused the interest of Western artists and architects, as is attested by the significant number of sketches and paintings of the motif (IG_118, IG_136, IG_150, IG_153, IG_438, IG_439, IG_468), as well by the replicas of such windows installed in Arab-style interiors across Europe (IG_56, IG_57, IG_64, IG_427IG_430).

The window from the Louvre discussed here stands out from other windows of the same type, owing to the remarkable quality of the design, which testifies to the skill of the craftsmen or women who made the window. The colours and material properties of the glass and the latticework – although heavily restored – suggest that the window dates to the late 19th century. This assumption is supported by the results of an analytical study of glass from two stucco and glass windows from the Louvre collection (OA 7466/7, OA 7466/25) conducted by a team from the Musée du Louvre (Fellinger et al., 2022).

As to its origin, the window is one of 39 qamariyyāt supposedly bought in Cairo by the architect Ambroise Baudry (1883–1906) for the French civil mining engineer and art collector Baron Alphonse Delort de Gléon (1843–1899) (Bailly et al., 2008, pp. 16–24). They adorned the Ottoman salon of Delort de Gléon’s hôtel particulier, purchased in 1883, at rue Vézelay 18 in Paris (Volait, 2005, pp. 131–134; Volait, 2009, pp. 99–104, 130–135). This is confirmed by several historical photographs preserved at the Département des Arts de l’Islam (DAI) of the Musée du Louvre, which show the windows Inserted In the upper parts of wooden mashrabiyyāt (see Linked Objects and Images). The salon was designed by the baron himself in collaboration with the French architect Jules Bourgoin (1838–1908). The creation of orientalizing interiors, composed of original architectural elements and furnishings as well as replicas of the same, was a widespread practice among Western art collectors at the time (Giese, 2016; Volait, 2016; Giese, 2019).

Based on these photographs and the presumed date of the windows, one may assume that the windows were created especially for Delort de Gléon’s Arab-style interior and had never been part of a historical building in Cairo. The complete history of these windows however, including possibly multiple reuses and several restorations, is difficult to reconstruct. Based on the unpublished study by Bailly et al. (2008) and our own observations, it seems that most of the windows have been cut from their wooden frames. Extensive repairs to the stucco grille, as well as the partial or complete replacement of the thin plaster layer for embedding the pieces of glass at the backs of the panels, are proof of several restoration campaigns. It is likely that the light-brown (ochre-coloured) paint on the inside of the stucco grille is not original but was applied around 1922 in preparation for the display of the window in the exhibition rooms of the Louvre, with the intention of adapting the windows to their new surroundings (Bailly et al., 2008, pp. 16–24). The brown varnish applied on top of the paint is probably also the result of a restoration campaign, possibly before the Louvre exhibition in 1977, and may have been applied to match the colour of the wooden mashrabiyya in which the windows were displayed.

After the death of Delort de Gléon, the stucco and glass windows passed into the possession of his wife, Marie Augustine Angélina Delort de Gléon, who bequeathed them – as part of Delort de Gléon’s collection of Islamic art – to the Musée du Louvre in 1912 (Delort de Gléon, 1914).

Mentioned in:

  • Roux, 1977, p. 295.

  • Sotheby’s, 2010, p. 197, no. 303.

Dating
Late 13th–early 14th centuries AH / late 19th century CE
Period
1880 – 1899
Previous Locations
Place of Manufacture

Provenance

Owner
Since 1912: Museum of the Louvre, Inventory Number: OA 7466/2, Paris (France), Donation L1
Previous Owner
From 1883 (ca.) until 1899: Delort de Gléon, Alphonse, Paris (France)
Provenance Footnotes
L1 Delort de Gléon, 1914

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Bailly, M., Frenkel, N., Gaymay, S., Hamadène, F., Liégey, A., Picur, V., Setton, J. M., & Tréluyer, V. (2008). Rapport d’etude concernant la collection des vitraux [unpublished research report]. Musée du Louvre, Département des arts de l’Islam.

Delort de Gléon, M. A. A. (1914, March 9). Legs de la collection de M. Delort de Gléon (Cote 20144787/17), Archives de musées nationaux (AMN), Archives nationales, Pierrefitte-sur-Seine, France.

Fellinger, G., Juvin, C., Bouquillon, A., Dallel, M., Loisel, C., Trichereau, B. & Groupement solidaire Setto (2022). Éclats de lumière : étude et restauration de vitraux égyptiennes du musée du Louvre. Technè 54, 114–125.

Giese, F. (2016). From Style Room to Period Room: Henri Moser’s fumoir in Charlottenfels Castle. In: S. Costa, D. Poulot, & M. Volait (Eds.), Period rooms. Allestimenti storici tra arte, gusto e collezionismo: Atti del Convegno Internazionale, Bologna, 18-19 aprile 2016 (pp. 153–160). Bologna: Bolonia University Press.

Giese, F. (2019). International Fashion and Personal Taste. Neo-Islamic Style Rooms and Orientalizing Scenographies in Private Museums. In Giese, F., Volait, M. and Varela Braga, A. (eds.), À l’orientale. Collecting, Displaying and Appropriating Islamic Art and Architecture in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries (Arts and Archaeology of the Islamic World, 14), Leiden: Brill, pp. 92–110.

Roux, J.-P. (1977). L'Islam dans les collections nationales (exhibition catalogue). Paris: Editions des Musées nationaux.

Sotheby’s (2010, April 4). Arts of the Islamic World, including fine carpets and textiles. London.

Volait, M. (2005). La rue du Caire. In Bacha, M. (ed.). Les Expositions Universelles à Paris, de 1855 à 1937 (pp.131–134). Paris : Action artistique de la Ville de Paris.

Volait, M. (2009). Fous du Caire. Excentriques, architectes & amateurs d’art en égypte 1863–1914. L’Archange Minotaure.

Volait, M. (2016). Les intérieurs orientalistes du comte de Saint-Maurice et d’Albert Goupil: des ‘Cluny arabes’ au Caire et à Paris à la fin du XIXe siècle. In S. Costa, D. Poulot & M. Volait (Eds.), The Period Rooms: Allestimenti storici tra arte, collezionismo e museologia (pp. 103–114). Bononia University Press.

Exhibitions

1977: L'Islam dans les collections nationales, Paris, Grand Palais

Image Information

Name of Image
FRA_Paris_MuseeDuLouvre_IG_2
Credits
© 2012 Musée du Louvre, dist. RMN – Grand Palais / Raphaël Chipault
Date
2012

Linked Objects and Images

Additional Images
Paris, Hôtel particulier Delort de Gléon, Ottoman salon

Citation suggestion

Giese, F., & Wolf, S. (2024). Stucco and glass window with a cypress tree surrounded by a flower tendril. In Vitrosearch. Retrieved December 5, 2025 from https://vitrosearch.ch/objects/2712846.

Record Information

Reference Number
IG_2