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IG_169: Stucco and glass window with curlicues and flowers
(USA_NewYork_MetropolitanMuseumOfArt_IG_169)

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Title

Stucco and glass window with curlicues and flowers

Type of Object
Dimensions
116.8 x 45.7 x 3.4 cm (with frame, approximate depth)
Artist / Producer
Place of Manufacture
Dating
early 13th–early 14th centuries AH / 19th century CE
Location
Inventory Number
93.26.17
Research Project
Author and Date of Entry
Francine Giese, Sophie Wolf 2025

Iconography

Description

Round-arched stucco and glass window with repeating floral ornament consisting of alternating concave and convex curlicues and flowers. The curlicues are arranged in vertical rows that end in two curved arcs in the upper part of the field. Each pair of convex curlicues encloses either a flower with one or two blossoms – among them lilies and tulips – or a five-petalled leaf or palmette. The flowers and palmettes are set against a perforated background, which is slightly recessed. The motif is framed by an arch composed of regularly arranged circles and rectangles.

Iconclass Code
25G41 · flowers
48A9813 · ornament ~ round and curved forms
Iconclass Keywords

Materials, Technique and State of Preservation

Materials

Fine-grained, aggregate-free gypsum plaster; colourless glass (some pieces having a greyish tint); coloured glass (blue, two shades of orange colour, green, two shades of red flashed glass); wooden frame

Technique

The latticework was carved into an arc-shaped stucco panel and inlaid with colourless and coloured sheet glass. The pieces of glass are fixed onto the back of the lattice with a 2–3mm-thick layer of gypsum plaster. To prevent the pieces of glass from being displaced while pouring the embedding stucco, they were fixed to the latticework with an adhesive. Traces of this animal or vegetable glue are visible in the area around the openings. The thickness of the stucco panel is c.34mm. The stucco panel was cast in a wooden frame measuring c.35 × 40 × 40mm. The wooden frame is stained dark brown.

The design of the latticework has two levels. The main motif (level 0) has been carved out of the stucco panel with sharp, knife-like tools. Traces of the incisions are still visible in some places on the front. The second level (level –1), which lies 7–8mm below level 0, shows irregularly spaced, slightly conical perforations. The holes were pierced with a metal or wooden pin in the stucco before it was fully set. They vary between 8 and 10mm in diameter and are slightly tapered towards the back. The distance between the holes is 2–8mm. All holes are backed with colourless glass. The main design and the perforations have been worked in such a way that the incident light is directed downwards into the room.

The coloured and colourless pieces of glass are roughly cut with the glass-cutter, so that they close the openings of the stucco lattice. The coloured glass has is c.2–3mm thick. Its surfaces are smooth and even, and the glass is bubble-free. Some of the original colourless pieces of glass – recognizable by the slightly greyish tint – were substituted with clear glass.

State of Preservations and Restorations

The stucco latticework is intact. There are only minor losses in the thin plaster layer in which the pieces of glass are embedded, mainly along the edges of the panel. The thin plaster layer also shows zones with different coloration, particularly in the top third of the panel, below the arch. They bear witness to repeated repairs, which involved filling losses in the top layer with (more lightly coloured) stucco and replacing missing or broken glass.

History

Research

This stucco and glass window was produced according to the traditional method used in the manufacture of qamariyyāt in North Africa to this day (see Technique) and represents of motif that was widespread in Egypt during the Ottoman period. Ornamental patterns with convexly and concavely arranged curlicues and flowers are a recurring motif in Islamic stucco and glass windows. There are numerous variations of this motif, which differ in the number of rows and the type of flowers.

Windows with this motif can be found in several of the collections studied (IG_15, IG_41, IG_254, IG_257). This type of window is also prominently depicted in Arthur Melville’s painting An Arab Interior of 1881 (IG_93). Common to all these windows is the symmetrical distribution of curlicues and flowers that create a repeating ornament.

The window discussed here is composed of two vertical rows of curlicues, just as the windows held at the Musée du Louvre in Paris (IG_41), the Musée des Beaux-Arts and the Musée des Confluences in Lyon (IG_254, IG_257) and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London (ME. 1–2005). An almost identical qamariyya was documented by the German architect Julius Franz (1831–1915) in the second edition of his Die Baukunst des Islam of 1896 (IG_164). The Italian photographer Beniamino Facchinelli (1839–1895) documented another example at the Museum of Arab Art in Cairo (IG_205). It is possible that the window discussed here was copied from the one displayed at the Cairene Museum.

According to the museum records, the window dates to the 18th century. However, there are some indications that point to a later production date: firstly, the good state of preservation of the stucco lattice, which would have shown clearer signs of weathering if it had been installed and exposed to the elements for a longer period of time, and secondly, the use of cylinder-blown flat glass (also called broad-sheet). In the Islamic world, sheet glass was usually produced using the crown-glass process, while in Europe, the broad sheet-method was the dominant technique to make flat glass. The Hungarian architect Max Herz (1856–1919) states that sheet glass was imported to Egypt from Europe from the 19th century, because local production had come to a standstill (Herz, 1902, p. 53).

A hand-written letter dated 22 May 1893 to Luigi Palma di Cesnola (1832–1904), the then director of The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, provides information on the provenance of the window. The author of this letter, the American architect William Robert Ware (1832–1915), writes that he had acquired this and various other windows in the spring of 1890 from several well-known art and antiquity dealers in Cairo. He mentions [Gaspare] Giuliana, [E. M.] Malluk, [Nicolas?] Tano, and [Panayotis] Kyticas (on their commercial activities see Volait, 2021, pp. 60–64). In his letter, Ware further states that he was told that the windows ‘had been taken from old houses’ and ‘from old mosques, that had been dismantled’, but that he was not able to get ‘any precise information as to their original places’ (Ware, 1893).

In 1893, Ware donated this window as part of a lot of 17 qamariyyāt (IG_169, IG_171–186) to The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Ware, 1893).

Dating
early 13th–early 14th centuries AH / 19th century CE
Period
1800 – 1899
Previous Locations
Place of Manufacture

Provenance

Owner
Since 1893: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Inventory Number: 93.26.17, collection (access date: 6.12.2024), New York (United States of America), Donation
Previous Owner
From 1890 until 1893: Ware, William Robert

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Herz, M. (1902). Le musée national du Caire. Gazette des Beaux-Arts, 3. Pér. 28, 45–59, 497–505.

Volait, M. (2021). Antique Dealing and Creative Reuse in Cairo and Damascus 1850–1890. Leiden: Brill.

Ware, W. R. (1893, May 22). [Letter to Luigi Palma di Cesnola]. MET Archives (W 229), New York City, NY, United States.

Image Information

Name of Image
USA_NewYork_MetropolitanMuseumOfArt_IG_169
Credits
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Date
2023
Copyright
Public Domain

Citation suggestion

Giese, F., & Wolf, S. (2025). Stucco and glass window with curlicues and flowers. In Vitrosearch. Retrieved December 5, 2025 from https://vitrosearch.ch/objects/2713013.

Record Information

Reference Number
IG_169