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Isma`il Jalayir [Isma`il Jalayir]
( fl c. 186070). Iranian painter. The son of Hajji Muhammad Zaman Khan Jalayir of Khurasan, Isma`il Jalayir trained in the 1860s at the Dar al-Funun, the college founded in Tehran by the Qajar monarch Nasir al-Din (reg 184896). The artist worked in a variety of media including oil, miniature, grisaille and varnished paint (lacquer; see ISLAMIC ART, §VIII, 10). In addition to portraits, his subjects ranged from Christian scenes, such as the Sacrifice of Isaac (ex-Schulz priv. col., see Schulz, i, pl. F), to depictions of historical events. In 1861 he added a battle scene of the Qajar ruler Muhammad (reg 183448) to a varnished penbox (sold London, Sothebys, 1978) decorated some two decades earlier by MUHAMMAD HASAN AFSHAR with scenes of the Last Judgement. Isma`il Jalayir was a favourite of Nasir al-Din and painted a fine portrait of him (18623; Tehran, Mus. Dec. A.). The artists work is Europeanized on the surface, as in a painting of a group of ladies drinking tea from a samovar in a garden pavilion (London, V&A, P.561941), but maintains the traditions of Persian painting and is often tinged with gentle melancholy. Isma`il Jalayir committed suicide at a young age.
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