Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, at the height of the Ottoman Empire, ceramic vessels and tiles of remarkable artistic and technical quality were produced at Iznik, a city in northwestern Anatolia. The middle of the sixteenth century was an important moment in the evolution of Iznik wares. To the existing blue-and-white palette was added color: first turquoise, green, and purple, then a red slip. The earlier focus on tableware was supplemented by a new demand for architectural tilework. Also at this time a new style emerged that emphasized floral motifs, such as familiar flowers (roses, carnations, tulips, etc.), as well as compositions of leaves and palmettes. The enduring quality of Iznik at its best and most representative is the effect of bold patterning in brilliant polychrome set against a pure white ground. The design here consists of elaborate palmettes and sinuously writhing leaves with serrated edges. Rosettes are half-covered by leaves, which, in turn, are pierced by stems. This pattern is typical of the so-called saz style, a term that derives from the words saz kalem , or “reed pen.” The style developed in album drawings in black ink executed during the
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Anonymous — Book cover with overall black and blue leaf patt
Anonymous — Book cover with overall floral and dot design
Manchu — Panel (Furnishing Fabric)
Anonymous — Sheet with overall blue circular pattern
William Morris — Tulip
Uzbekistan, possibly Shakhrisabz or Shafirkhan — Suzani (lar
Swasiland Print Works — Panel
Turkey — Cover
Anonymous — Book cover with floral pattern with orange backg
William Morris — Windrush
England — Panel (Furnishing Fabric)
Japan — Design on Paper