Miniature pasted on an album leaf. ‘A Courtier with an Astrakhan Hat’
Qajar Iran became Europeanized in earnest under Nasir-al-Din Shah (1848-1896). In order to counter pressure from Russia, the country was allied with the Western powers, and the shah was very interested in modern technology, not just weapons, but also other inventions. He was a competent photographer, for example.
A photograph must in fact have been the model for this portrait, which in many ways breaks with ancient Persian tradition. The face clearly reflects a real one, and there is none of the stylization that otherwise characterized earlier Qajar painting. But although the depiction of the fur-trimmed caftan with the carefully detailed boteh pattern is naturalistic, the painting still seems curiously two-dimensional and alienated.
A photograph must in fact have been the model for this portrait, which in many ways breaks with ancient Persian tradition. The face clearly reflects a real one, and there is none of the stylization that otherwise characterized earlier Qajar painting. But although the depiction of the fur-trimmed caftan with the carefully detailed boteh pattern is naturalistic, the painting still seems curiously two-dimensional and alienated.