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IG_335: Stucco and glass window with intertwined tendrils
(GRC_Athens_BenakiMuseumOfIslamicArt_IG_335)

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Titre

Stucco glass window with intertwined tendrils

Type d'objet
Dimensions
61 x 42.5 cm (without frame); 68.8 x 50.5 cm (with frame)
Artiste
Lieu de production
Datation
late 13th–first half of 14th centuries AH / late 19th–early 20th centuries CE (?)
Lieu
Numéro d'inventaire
22373
Projet de recherche
Auteur·e et date de la notice
Francine Giese, Sophie Wolf 2025

Iconographie

Description

Stucco and glass window showing floral ornamentation in a slightly pointed frame of blue rectangles. The floral decoration is composed of two networks of intertwined tendrils with regularly arranged palmettes and half-palmettes in green and red. At the bottom of the panel, the tendrils terminate in spirals. On both sides and at the top of the panel, the tendrils are partially cut off by the surrounding frame. The motif is worked out in relief against a perforated background that lies 3–4mm below the surface of the stucco panel.

Code Iconclass
48A983 · ornement dérivé de formes végétales
48A983112 · palmette ~ ornement
48A98312 · vrilles ~ ornement
Mot-clés Iconclass

Matériaux, technique et état de conservation

Matériaux

Gypsum plaster; colourless glass; coloured glass (two shades of green (one replaced in 2003), light blue, yellow); three shades of red flashed glass (one replaced in 2003)

Technique

Latticework carved into a rectangular stucco panel and inlaid with colourless and coloured sheet glass. The pieces of glass are fixed on the back of the lattice with a thin layer of gypsum plaster. The average thickness of the stucco panel is 19–20mm. The stucco panel was cast in a wooden frame.

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. On the front of the latticework, tool marks are visible in some places. The second level (level –1), which lies 3–4mm below level 0, shows irregularly spaced, conical perforations that were pierced with a metal or wooden pin in the stucco before it was fully set. The holes are approximately 5mm in diameter and slightly tapered towards the back. The distance between the holes is 5–10mm. 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 glass is either colourless or coloured in the mass; the red pieces are made of flashed glass. Elongated parallel bubbles indicate that the glass sheets were mouth-blown, possibly using the broad-sheet method.

Etat de conservation et restaurations

The window is well preserved and was thoroughly restored in 2003. During this intervention, earlier repairs as well as a thick coat of dark paint were removed. The restoration measures included the cleaning the surface of the stucco lattice (laser cleaning, density: 1.5 J/cm2 at 1064nm), bonding cracks with acrylic resin, and filling lacunae in the stucco lattice with gypsum and/or acrylic fillers. The repairs were retouched with pigmented acrylic emulsion. The original wooden frame was cleaned and reinforced by fixing stainless metal plates on the joints of the frame.

At the time of restoration, most of the original pieces of glass were preserved. The few missing pieces were replaced with new ones, which were attached with cellulose nitrate.

Historique de l'oeuvre

Recherche

This stucco and glass window shows a floral ornamentation that is very common in the stucco decoration of al-Andalus and the Maghreb, where it is known as sebka. It is rarely found in windows from the eastern Islamic world, especially those from Ottoman Egypt. There, designs with curlicues and flowers are much more common, such as those found in several windows in the collections studied (see for instance IG_41, IG_169, IG_254).

Like other windows of the Benaki Museum (see for instance IG_334, IG_355, IG_357), the design of this window differs considerably from Islamic examples produced in Egypt. It can therefore be assumed that it was designed by a Western architect or made according to the specific wishes of a Western client. Particularly, the ‘reuse’ of an ornamentation traditionally seen in wall decoration follows the transmedial tendencies of late 19th- and early 20th-century Historicist art.

The unusual design as well as the good state of preservation of the window – even before its restoration in 2003 – suggest that it was produced sometime between the late 19th and early 20th century. The window was made according to the traditional technique used in the manufacture of qamariyyāt in Egypt to this day (see Technique).

Another criterion in favour of the proposed date of manufacture is the fact that pieces of glass show the characteristics of cylinder-blown sheet glass, a technique that was uncommon in the Islamic world at that time and more commonly used in Europe. Interestingly, the Hungarian architect Max Herz (1856–1819) states in 1902 that sheet glass was imported to Egypt from Europe from the 19th century, because local sheet-glass production had come to a standstill (Herz, 1902, p. 53).

In 1973, the Benaki Museum in Athens acquired the window along with IG_335 from Ioannis Krystalidis (life dates and biography unknown).

Datation
late 13th–first half of 14th centuries AH / late 19th–early 20th centuries CE (?)
Période
1880 – 1920
Sites antérieures
Lieu de production

Provenance

Propriétaire
Dès 1973: Benaki Museum of Islamic Art, Numéro d'inventaire: 22373, Athènes (Grèce), Achat
Propriétaire précédent·e
De [année de réception inconnue] jusque 1973: Krystalidis, Ioannis

Bibliographie et sources

Bibliographie

Ballian, Anna (ed.) (2006): Benaki Museum. A Guide to the Museum of Islamic Art, Athens, Benaki Museum, pp. 136–137.

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

Expositions

since 2004: Room III of the premanent exhibition of the Benaki Museum of Islamic Art, Athens

Informations sur l'image

Nom de l'image
GRC_Athens_BenakiMuseumOfIslamicArt_IG_335
Crédits photographiques
© 2023 by Benaki Museum Athens

Proposition de citation

Giese, F., & Wolf, S. (2025). Stucco glass window with intertwined tendrils. Dans Vitrosearch. Consulté le 5 décembre 2025 de https://vitrosearch.ch/objects/2713179.

Informations sur l’enregistrement

Numéro de référence
IG_335