Forschung
This stucco and glass window is one of the few examples preserved in Western museum collections representing a palm tree. Several windows of this type are preserved at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, among them ME.3-2005, MES.LOST.25, MES.LOST.34, and C.157-1932. It was produced according to the traditional method used in the manufacture of qamariyyāt in North Africa to this day (see Technique).
According to the museum records, the window dates to the 18th century. However, the good state of preservation of the stucco lattice raises doubts about this early dating. If the window had actually been installed in a building in the 18th century, we would have expected to observe clearer traces of weathering.
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).
Datierung
early 13th–early 14th centuries AH / 19th century CE (?)
Zeitraum
1800 – 1899
Frühere Standorte
Herstellungsort