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IG_186: Stucco and glass window with flower and star motif
(USA_NewYork_MetropolitanMuseumOfArt_IG_186)

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Titre

Stucco and glass window with flower and star motif

Type d'objet
Dimensions
56.8 x 47.9 x 3.2 cm (with frame); 46.8 x 38.4 x 2.5 cm (without frame)
Artiste
Lieu de production
Datation
12th–early 14th centuries AH / 18th–19th century CE
Lieu
Numéro d'inventaire
93.26.4
Projet de recherche
Auteur·e et date de la notice
Francine Giese, Sophie Wolf 2025

Iconographie

Description

This stucco and glass window consists of a sixteen-pointed star enclosing a sixteen-pointed flower. The flower is imperfect, as two of its petals are ‘grown together’, i.e., are not separated by a line. The star is inscribed in a circle with an ornamental upper contour reminiscent of a semicircular arch. The area below the circle is decorated with perforations and two triangles (in the corners).

Code Iconclass
48A981 · ornement ~ motifs géométriques
48A9815 · ornement ~ formes étoilées
Mot-clés Iconclass

Matériaux, technique et état de conservation

Matériaux

Coarse-grained gypsum plaster; colourless glass (clear glass as well as glass with a greenish, greyish, or bluish tint); coloured glass (two shades of green, blue, two shades of yellow including an orange colour, two shades of red

Technique

The latticework was carved into a rectangular stucco panel and inlaid with colourless and coloured sheet glass. The pieces of glass are fixed onto the back of the lattice with a thin layer (0.5–1.5mm) of gypsum plaster. Traces of this animal or vegetable glue are visible in the area around the openings. The thickness of the stucco panel is c.20–22mm. The stucco panel was cast in a wooden frame measuring c.45 × 45 × 25mm. The frame has been stained brown. There are traces of this paint on along the edge of the plaster panel.

The design of the latticework has been carved out of the stucco panel with sharp, knife-like tools following a template incised in the surface of the panel. Traces of the incisions are still visible in some places on the front. There are irregularly spaced, conical perforations. They vary between 18 and 20mm in diameter and are slightly tapered towards the back. The distance between the holes is 3–7mm. The holes are backed with yellow glass and not the usual clear glass. In addition, the motif is not cut in the oblique manner, as is usually the case.

The pieces of glass were cut using a glass-cutter; scratch marks along the edges of some of the pieces testify to this process. Some of the pieces of glass show uneven surfaces and elongated, parallel bubbles. These features suggest that the glass sheets from which the pieces were cut were mouth-blown, probably using the broad-sheet method.

Etat de conservation et restaurations

The stucco latticework shows cracks and minor losses, but seems generally intact. No pieces of glass are missing. There are signs of earlier restorations. The repairs involved filling the losses with stucco, refixing loose pieces of glass with adhesive, and supplementing the thin plaster layer in which the pieces of glass are embedded with various types of plaster.

Historique de l'oeuvre

Recherche

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 a motif that was widespread in Egypt during the Ottoman period.

There are two comparable examples of stucco and glass windows with the flower-and-star motif in the collections studied, one held at the Medelhavsmuseet (Museum of Mediterranean and Near Eastern Antiquities) in Stockholm (IG_166), and the other at the Benaki Museum of Islamic Art in Athens (IG_353). A similar window is depicted in Gustave le Bon’s La Civilisation des Arabes of 1884 (IG_192) among other stucco and glass windows from Cairo. The motif is also shown in numerous sketches and paintings (see for instance IG_104, IG_118, IG_444).

The representation of symmetrically designed flowers and stars is a recurring element of Islamic ornamentation across time and media. However, the insertion of a flower within a star is uncommon in al-Andalus and the Maghreb, where star ornamentation is always restricted to purely geometric forms (see for instance IG_170, IG_363, IG_364, IG_366). This diffrence supports the attribution of the window to Egypt.

According to the museum records, the window dates to the 17th century. There are, however, 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 manufacture flat glass. The Hungarian architect Max Herz (1856–1819) 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).

Datation
12th–early 14th centuries AH / 18th–19th century CE
Période
1700 – 1899
Sites antérieures
Lieu de production

Provenance

Propriétaire
Dès 1893: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Numéro d'inventaire: 93.26.4, collection (date d'accès: 6.12.2024), New York (États Unis), Donation
Propriétaire précédent·e
De 1890 jusque 1893: Ware, William Robert

Bibliographie et sources

Bibliographie

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.

Informations sur l'image

Nom de l'image
USA_NewYork_MetropolitanMuseumOfArt_IG_186
Crédits photographiques
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Date de la photographie
2023
Copyright
Public Domain

Proposition de citation

Giese, F., & Wolf, S. (2025). Stucco and glass window with flower and star motif. Dans Vitrosearch. Consulté le 5 décembre 2025 de https://vitrosearch.ch/objects/2713030.

Informations sur l’enregistrement

Numéro de référence
IG_186