Artwork Page for Fragment with gold leaf lions

Details / Information for Fragment with gold leaf lions

Fragment with gold leaf lions

1000s–1100s
Measurements
Overall: 32.1 x 40 cm (12 5/8 x 15 3/4 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

This is one of the comparatively few printed textiles with extensive use of costly gold to have survived from the medieval period in Iran or Iraq.

Description

Gold was block-printed onto mulham cloth with figures of lions—symbols of the royal hunt and imperial power. Gold lions adorned with collars and palmettes enliven squares on dark-brown and undyed mulham groups in a checkerboard layout. The pattern was printed with several blocks on the mulham surface. The process included drawing outlines with black ink and block printing with gold powder and dark-brown pigment, each mixed with a binding medium. The gold paint was flattened with rubbing, which created a good imitation of gold leaf.
A horizontally oriented textile fragment features rows of block-printed gold leaf lions across frayed tan silk and cotton pieces. The lions face left with tails curled upward; some are enclosed in dark squares with dotted borders, while others sit directly on the tan ground. Significant wear is visible in the jagged edges and loose threads, creating an irregular, fragmented horizontal composition of gilded animal motifs.

Fragment with gold leaf lions

1000s–1100s

Iran or Iraq, Seljuk period

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