Image Ordered

IG_47: Book illustration: Fragment d’un vitrail, Mosquée El-Moyed
(IG_Bourgoin_1873_IG_47)

Contact Details

Please specify your first name.
Please specify your name.
Please specify your e-mail address.
The e-mail address is invalid.

Please provide as much information as possible (publication title, database, publisher, edition, year of publication, etc.).

The Vitrocentre Romont can only provide you with its own photographs. We regret that we cannot supply images from third parties to you. If your order concerns photographs from third parties, we will send you the contact address from which the images can be obtained.

The personal data you provide in this form will be used by Vitrocentre Romont exclusively for the processing of your image order. Correspondence regarding the order will be archived for internal reference. The data will not be used for purposes other than those listed here, nor will it be passed on to third parties. By sending the order form, you agree to this use of your personal data.

Should you have any questions, please send us an e-mail: info@vitrosearch.ch.

Title

Fragment d’un vitrail, Mosquée El-Moyed

Type of Object
Artist / Producer
Bourgoin, Jules · Draughtsman
Levié, Adolphe · Lithographer
Dating
1873
Dimensions
43.7 x 30 cm

Iconography

Description

Pl. 92 in Jules Bourgoin, Les Arts arabes, 1873. The plate shows the front and back view of a stucco and glass window with a framed central cypress. Between the two views, a section of the window is depicted, showing the cut plaster panel and the openings widening towards the front.

Description of the plate: ‘Pl. 92. Fragment d’un vitrail, Mosquée El-Moyed. – Des dalles de plâtre sont ajourées sur une ou deux épaisseurs; souvent les trous sont évasés et inclinés de haut en bas. Des fragments de verres colorés sont simplement fichés derrière sur une couche de plâtre liquide. L’exposition universelle de 1867 possédait quelques spécimens de vitraux de ce genre, dans la section turque. C’est une charmante invention et d’un très-bel effet, surtout lorsque le réseau de plâtre est bien apparent.’ (Bourgoin, 1873, p. 4).

Iconclass Code
25G3(CYPRESS) · trees: cypress
Iconclass Keywords

Technique / State

Technique

Chromolithography

History

Research

During his stay in Egypt in 1863–1866, the French architect Jules Bourgoin (1838–1908) made numerous drawings of architectural details, among them several stucco and glass windows. Based on this documentation, he published Les Arts arabes between 1868 and 1873.
As he states, the plate shows a fragment of a stucco and glass window from the Mosque of al-Muʾayyad. One of his drawings shows the same window (Bibliothèque de l'Institut national d'histoire de l'art, Paris, Archives 067, 10, 06_feuillet11verso). When he was in Cairo, this mosque was already in a ruinous state, as is later reported by the Comité de Conservation des Monuments de l’Art Arabe (Barois/Grand/Sedak/Herz, 1890, p. 74). The stucco and glass window depicted by Bourgoin was possibly no longer in situ. This would explain how Bourgoin was able to make his study of the back and draw the section. With these different views, the technical aspects of stucco and glass windows were illustrated for the first time.
In the textual part, Bourgoin (1873, p. 4) only briefly comments on the technique of the windows, mentioning their oblique carving and praising their beautiful effect.

While the window depicted by Bourgoin is lost, there are to this day, in the mausoleum of the mosque, two windows, each with four rectangular panels and two lunette panels. The mausoleum had not fallen into ruins, and was still standing in 1890, when the Comité de Conservation des Monuments de l’Art Arabe inspected it (Barois/Grand/Sedak/Herz, 1890, p. 74). The four lower panels of the windows depict cypresses flanked by tendrils. Flood argued that they, or their design, date to the years of the completion of the mosque in 826 AH /1422 AD. His argument is based on the knot ornament in the trunk of the cypresses, which appears in an Iranian manuscript dated 849–50 AH /1445–46 AD (Flood, 1993, p. 142, ill. 93). The Comité de Conservation also lists a sum for the ‘réparation et réfection des vitraux’ in 1890 (Barois/Grand/Sedak/Herz, 1890, p. 76).
The knot ornament does not appear on Bourgoin’s illustration, but the extant windows do give an idea of how Bourgoin’s panel may have been part of a larger window. More surprising are the colours given by the French architect for his window; the complete lack of red tones is very unusual. The colours are already identified in Bourgoin’s drawing, and they correspond to those of the printed lithograph. However, the windows in the Mausoleum of al-Muʾayyad do include many pieces of red and orange glass.

Dating
1873
Period
1863 – 1873
Related Locations

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Barois, J., Grand, P., Sadek, M., & Herz, M. (1890). Examen de la mosquée el Mouayyed (plan Grand bey n° 190). In Comité de Conservation des Monuments de l'Art Arabe 7, pp. 69–77.

Bibliothèque de l'Institut national d'histoire de l'art, collections Jacques Doucet, Archives 067, 10, 06_feuillet11verso. Retrieved from https://agorha.inha.fr/ark:/54721/3312d8ea-d5c5-4220-8a2b-1d659ce6086d.

Bourgoin, J. (1873). Les Arts arabes. Architecture, menuiserie, bronzes, plafonds, revêtements, marbres, pavements, vitraux, etc. Paris: Vve A. Morel et Cie.Bourgoin.

Coste, Pascal-Xavier (1837). Architecture arabe ou Monuments du Kaire, mesurés et dessinés, de 1818 à 1826. Paris: Typographie de Firmin Didot Frères et Compagnie, Imprimeurs de l'Institut de France.

Flood, F. B. (1993). Palaces of crystal, sanctuaries of light: windows, jewels and glass in medieval islamic architecture [PhD thesis, University of Edinburg]. Edinburgh College of Art thesis and dissertation collection. Retrieved from https://era.ed.ac.uk/handle/1842/19754.

Exhibitions

18.5.2024–1.9.2024: Luminosité de l’Orient, Vitromusée Romont

Image Information

Name of Image
IG_Bourgoin_1873_IG_47
Credits
Source gallica.bnf.fr / BnF

Inventory

Reference Number
IG_47
Author and Date of Entry
Sarah Keller 2024

Linked Objects and Images

Linked Objects
Les arts arabes