AKM PS24 Robe Embroidery of Vamiq and Azra

Dublin Core

Title

AKM PS24 Robe Embroidery of Vamiq and Azra

Description

Photograph of AKM PS24 Robe, focusing on the back bottom-left panel of the robe, depicting a scene with Vamiq and Azra. A story deriving from the eleventh-century Iranian poet, Unṣurī in his work titled, "The Virgin and Her Lover". The story is an epic retelling of the Greek 1st century story of Parthenope and Metiochus. In this embroidery, Vamiq and Azra are seated on a carpet, facing one another, seemingly in conversation. The scene likely depicts their debate over "Eros" or the effigy of love, as found in both the Persian and Greek tellings of the story. The Farsi script above the embroidered characters is not legible but one decipherable word in the sentence appears to mention the word "agree" , perhaps referencing Vamiq and Azra's discussion of love and their potential agreement with their interpretations.

Source

Central Asia; Current: Aga Khan Museum

Publisher

Aga Khan Museum

Date

20th century

Contributor

Aga Khan Museum

Rights

Creative Commons

Format

photograph of robe

Files

VamiqAzra.jpg

Tags

Citation

“AKM PS24 Robe Embroidery of Vamiq and Azra,” Spatial Humanities, accessed December 22, 2024, https://spatial-humanities.library.utoronto.ca/items/show/40280.

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