Image Ordered

IG_426: Stucco glass window with cypress tree and flower tendril
(FRA_Rochefort_MaisonPierreLoti_IG_426)

Contact Details

Please specify your first name.
Please specify your name.
Please specify your e-mail address.
The e-mail address is invalid.

Please provide as much information as possible (publication title, database, publisher, edition, year of publication, etc.).

The Vitrocentre Romont can only provide you with its own photographs. We regret that we cannot supply images from third parties to you. If your order concerns photographs from third parties, we will send you the contact address from which the images can be obtained.

The personal data you provide in this form will be used by Vitrocentre Romont exclusively for the processing of your image order. Correspondence regarding the order will be archived for internal reference. The data will not be used for purposes other than those listed here, nor will it be passed on to third parties. By sending the order form, you agree to this use of your personal data.

Should you have any questions, please send us an e-mail: info@vitrosearch.ch.

Title

Stucco and glass window with cypress tree and flower tendril

Type of Object
Dimensions
102 x 45 x 4 cm (with frame); 95 x 39 x 4 cm (without frame)
Artist / Producer
Place of Manufacture
Dating
early 13th–early 14th century AH / 19th century CE
Location
Place
Mosque, eastern wall, northern gallery, E I
Research Project
Author and Date of Entry
Francine Giese, Sarah Keller 2025

Iconography

Description

Rectangular stucco and glass window with a green cypress tree in the centre, surrounded by an S-shaped winding flower tendril with stylized roses and three-petalled flowers. The scale-like pattern usually used to represent the foliage of the cypress tree is replaced in the upper part by geometric ornament, and the top of the tree is flanked by two leaves. The cypress tree and tendril are framed by a semicircular arch. The spandrels are decorated with three-petalled floral ornament. The cypress tree and the tendril are surrounded by a perforated background, which is slightly recessed.

The stucco panel is held in a wooden frame. The edges of the stucco panel show remnants of light grey and red paint. The backside of the window is protected with a 4mm-thick glass pane.

Iconclass Code
25G3(CYPRESS) · trees: cypress
25G41(ROSE) · flowers: rose
48A98783 · floral interlace ~ ornament
Iconclass Keywords
cypress · flower · rose

Materials, Technique and State of Preservation

Materials

Coarse-grained gypsum plaster; colourless glass; coloured glass (green, blue, orange); wood; red and light grey paint.

Technique

Latticework carved into a rectangular stucco panel and inlaid with pieces of colourless and coloured sheet glass. The latticework is held in a wooden frame.

The openings in the lattice were cut out of the stucco panel, when it was not yet completely set, using sharp tools. Once the latticework was finished, the coloured glass pieces, cut to the size of the openings using a glass cutter, were embedded in a thin layer of gypsum plaster and fixed to the back. This layer is on average 2–3mm thick. The thickness of the stucco panel is c.27–30mm.

The design of the latticework has two levels: the main motif (level 0) has been carved out of the stucco panel with a sharp, knife-like tool following a template incised in the surface of the panel. The second level (level -1), which lies 10mm below level 0, shows regularly spaced, conical perforations. The holes were pierced with a metal or wooden pin in the stucco that had not yet fully set. They have diameters varying between 10–12mm and are slightly tapered towards the back. The distance between the holes is 4–10mm. 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. At an unspecified point in time, the front of stucco panel was painted along the edges with red and grey-blue paint.


The glass is either colourless or coloured in the mass. Elongated, parallel bubbles indicate that the glass sheets were mouth-blown, probably using the broadsheet method. The glass pieces were cut according to the design of the latticework using a glass cutter. Some of the pieces have grozed edges. The coloured glass has an average thickness of 2mm.

State of Preservations and Restorations

The stucco panel shows several large losses and cracks. In the damaged areas, the glass pieces are missing. The red and light grey paint that was applied along the edges of the stucco panel is only partially preserved. The glass pane, attached to protect the back of the window, is intact. There are possible traces of mold in the interspace between the protective glass and the back of the panel.

History

Research

From a technical and iconographic point of view, this stucco and glass window corresponds to one of the standard types of qamariyya widespread in Egypt during the Ottoman period. Similar windows can be found in several of the collections studied (see for instance IG_18, IG_173, IG_355). The representation of a cypress tree surrounded by a flower tendril is a widespread motif in Islamic arts. It can be found in numerous other media, such as ceramics, wood panelling, wall paintings, and textiles, over a long period of time, and in both sacred and profane contexts.

Stucco and glass windows of this type are illustrated in 19th- and early 20th-century publications (see for instance IG_42, IG_47). The cypress-tree motif also aroused the interest of Western artists and architects, as is attested by the significant number of sketches and paintings of the motif (IG_118, IG_136, IG_150, IG_153, IG_438, IG_439, IG_468), as well by the replicas of such windows installed in Arab-style interiors across Europe (IG_56, IG_64, IG_427IG_430).

The French naval officer and novelist Pierre Loti (1850–1923), who had this stucco and glass window installed in the northern gallery of the so-called mosque built between 1895 and 1897 in his family’s house in Rochefort (France), was familiar with such windows from his extensive travels. In 1894, he embarked on a journey through Egypt, Palestine, and Turkey and subsequently published his observations and experiences in the trilogy Le désert (1894), Jérusalem (1895), and La Galilée (1896), as well as in the novel La mosquée verte (1896). In Jérusalem (Loti, 1895, p. 72), Loti relates his visit to the Dome of the Rock and pays particular attention to the stucco and glass windows and their luminous effects. He compares them to precious stones, praises the effect of the stucco grille, and describes the angling of the perforations. According to his accounts, Loti also visited traditional residences. He was even received in two reception halls (qāʾa) in Damascus, which are described in La Galilée and later inspired him in relation to his ‘mosque’ at Rochefort (Loti, 1896, p. 144, 146). In La mosquée verte, he comments on these windows again, this time those in the tomb of Mehmed I in Bursa. After mentioning other furnishings, such as the ceramic tiles and the carpets, the stucco and glass windows are described as follows: “Des petits vitraux, haut perchés, tout près du dôme, et travaillés autant que des pièces de bijouterie, laissant descendre une lumière changeante, comme filtrée au travers de pierres précieuses.” (Loti, 1896, p. 233).

According to Thierry Liot, this stucco and glass window may have belonged to the late 18th-century Damascene house from which the ceiling, mihrab, and woodwork of Loti’s ‘mosque’ at Rochefort are thought to have originated (Liot, 1999, p. 130; see also Giraud-Heraud, 1996, pp. 64–65). While it seems very likely that this window was manufactured in an Islamic land, its design, composition, and manufacturing technique point to Egypt rather than to Syria, which is why it is also possible that Loti acquired the window on the art market. Owing to the window’s formal and compositional characteristics, as well as the state of preservation of the stucco grille and the type of glass used, a dating to the 19th century may be more probable.

The present window seems to have inspired the four replicas IG_427IG_430, installed next to this one in the qibla-like eastern wall of Loti’s ‘mosque’. Like the replicas, this specimen was protected from the weather on the outward-facing rear side by means of a 4mm-thick pane of glass at an unknown date, but most probably in connection with the window’s installation at Rochefort.

Dating
early 13th–early 14th century AH / 19th century CE
Period
1800 – 1899
Commissioner
Previous Locations
Place of Manufacture

Provenance

Owner

Maison de Pierre Loti

Previous Owner

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Giraud-Heraud, C. (1996). Les salles orientales de la maison Pierre Loti à Rochefort. Unpublished thesis (Mémoire de Diplôme d'Etudes Approfondies), Université de Paris-Sorbonne-Paris IV. Paris.

Liot, T. (1999). La maison de Pierre Loti à Rochefort 1850–1923. Chauray: Patrimoines et médias.

Loti, P. (1894). Le désert. Nouvelle Revue 90, September–October, pp. 225–257, 449–472, 673-693; Nouvelle Revue 91, November–December, pp. 6–26, 225–247, 449–463.

Loti, P. (1895). Jérusalem. Paris: C. Lévy.

Loti, P. (1896). La Galilée. Paris: C. Lévy.

Image Information

Name of Image
FRA_Rochefort_MaisonPierreLoti_IG_426
Credits
@ Vitrocentre Romont
Date
2023

Linked Objects and Images

Linked Objects
Replica of a stucco and glass window with cypress tree and flower tendril
Replica of a stucco and glass window with cypress tree and flower tendril
Replica of a stucco and glass window with cypress tree and flower tendril
Replica of a stucco and glass window with cypress tree and flower tendril
Additional Images
'mosque' of Maison Pierre Loti, Rochefort

Citation suggestion

Giese, F., & Keller, S. (2025). Stucco and glass window with cypress tree and flower tendril. In Vitrosearch. Retrieved December 5, 2025 from https://www.vitrosearch.ch/objects/2713270.

Record Information

Reference Number
IG_426