Glück, Heinrich. Die indischen Miniaturen des Haemzae-Romanes im Österreichischen Museum für Kunst und Industrie in Wien und in anderen Sammlungen [...].

Zurich, Vienna, Leipzig, Amalthea Verlag, 1925.

Folio (345 x 485 mm). (4), 155, (1) pp. With 48 mounted illustrations in the text and 50 mounted collotype plates (10 of which coloured). Contemporary full red cloth with giltstamped title to cover and spine.

 800.00

First and only edition. Monumental annotated edition of the famous Akbar manuscript of the Hamzanama epos, based on the 60 folia located in Vienna. The Hamzanama narrates the fantastic adventures of Amir Hamza (Hamza ibn Abdul-Muttalib), an uncle of Muhammad, who with his band of heroes fought against the enemies of Islam. The stories, from a long-established oral tradition, were written down in Persian in multiple volumes presumably in the era of Mahmud of Ghazni. In the West the work is best known for the enormous illustrated manuscript commissioned by the Mughal Emperor Akbar around 1562. The size of the commission was completely unprecedented, and stretched even the huge imperial workshop. According to contemporary accounts, about 30 main artists were used, and over a hundred men worked on the various aspects of the book in all. One side of most folios has a painting, about 69 x 54 cm in size, carried out in a fusion of Persian and Mughal styles, while the other side is usually written on in Persian in Nasta'liq script. At some fairly early point, the Akbar manuscript became dispersed, and only a little over a hundred of the paintings survive. The largest group of 60 folia is stored at the Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna (Österreichisches Museum für angewandte Kunst - MAK), with the rest spread over many collections. The Victoria and Albert Museum possesses 27 images, bought in Kashmir, and the British Museum in London has one.

The present edition includes a description of the manuscript fragments held at the MAK, the Victoria and Albert Museum and other collections, as well as a German translation of the 60 leaves of the MAK by the art historian Glück (1889-1930), and a detailed account of the illustrations. The high-quality collotype illustrations were produced by the studio Max Jaffe in Vienna, conveying an impressive idea of the original illuminations.

Extremities slightly worn. Interior occasionally brownstained. Rarely seen at auction.

References

ÖBL II, 12. Dimand, Handbook of Mohameddan Decorative Arts XXV. OCLC 560171332.

Stock Code: BN#56241 Tags: , , , ,