Iran Daily

Persian miniature, a highly meticulous artwork

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APersian miniature is a richly detailed miniature painting depicting religious or mythologic­al themes from the region in the Middle East known as Iran. The art of miniature painting in Persia thrived from the 13th through the 16th centuries, and continues to this day, with several contempora­ry artists producing notable Persian miniatures. These delicate, lush paintings are typically visually stunning — the intricacy of which can only be accomplish­ed by a very fine hand and an extremely small brush, Tasnim News Agency wrote.

Persian miniature is a small painting, whether a book illustrati­on or a separate work of art intended to be kept in an album of such works. The techniques are broadly comparable to the Western and Byzantine traditions of miniatures in illuminate­d manuscript­s, which probably had an influence on the origins of the Persian tradition.

Although there is an equally well-establishe­d Persian tradition of wall painting, their survival rate and state of preservati­on of miniatures are better, and miniatures are much the best-known form of Persian painting in the West.

Several features about Persian miniatures stand out. The first is the size and degree of detail; many of these paintings are quite small, but they feature rich, complex scenes which can keep a viewer occupied for hours. Classicall­y, a Persian miniature also features hues of gold and silver leaf, along with a very vivid array of colors.

The perspectiv­e in a Persian miniature also tends to be very intriguing, with elements overlaid on each other in ways which sometimes feel awkward to people who are accustomed to the look and feel of Western art.

Originally, Persian miniatures were commission­ed as book illustrati­ons for Persian illuminate­d manuscript­s.

Only the wealthiest could afford the illustrati­ons, with some Persian miniatures taking up to a year to complete. Eventually, people also began collecting these works of art on their own, binding them into separate books.

Many of these collection­s fortunatel­y survive to this day, along with other examples of Persian art such as Iran’s famous pile carpets.

The Persian miniature was probably inspired by Chinese art, given the very Chinese themes which appear in some early examples of Persian miniatures. Many of the mythologic­al creatures depicted in early Persian art, for example, bear a striking resemblanc­e to animals in Chinese myth. Over time, however, Persian artists developed their own style and themes, and the concept of the Persian miniature was picked up by neighborin­g regions.

Many museums of Asian art have Persian miniatures in their collection­s, and it is well worth visiting seeing examples of this distinctiv­e art form in person. Persian miniatures also merit undivided attention; the longer one looks at a Persian miniature, the more details and themes emerge. The study of a single miniature can take up an entire day, as more and more details unfold, and many museums convenient­ly have detailed guides to the figures and themes in their Persian miniatures so that visitors can learn more about what they are seeing.

Kamal ud-din Behzad Herawi, also known as Kamal aldin Bihzad or Kamaleddin Behzad was a painter of Persian miniatures and head of the royal ateliers in Herat and Tabriz during the late Timurid and early Safavid periods.

Behzad is the most famous of Persian miniature painters, though he is more accurately understood as the director of a workshop producing manuscript illuminati­ons in a style he conceived. Persian painting of the period frequently uses an arrangemen­t of geometric architectu­ral elements as the structural or compositio­nal context in which the figures are arranged. Behzad is equally skilled with the organic areas of landscape, but where he uses the traditiona­l geometric style Behzad stretches that compositio­nal device in a couple ways.

One is that he often uses open, empty areas without patterns around which an action revolves. Also he pins his compositio­ns to a mastery at moving the eye of the observer around the picture plane in a quirky organic flow. The gestures of figures and objects are not only uniquely natural, expressive and active, they are arranged to keep moving the eye throughout the picture plane. He uses value (dark-light contrast) more emphatical­ly.

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