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Kervansara

Wooden jewelry chest with marquetry or Persian "khatam kari" with an elegant "tazhib" design, the refined art of lighting.

Wooden jewelry chest with marquetry or Persian "khatam kari" with an elegant "tazhib" design, the refined art of lighting.

Regular price €50,00 EUR
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Wooden jewellery box measuring 10 x 16 x 9.5 cm, lined with velvet, hand-crafted and hand-painted on a blue background with an elegant "tazhib" design, the refined art of illumination, in which the golden colour plays a leading role. The outer frame and the sides of the work are decorated with the laborious "khatam kari" (marquetry) technique, which gives the whole a special shine and an exquisite finish.

What was once the Persian Empire is undoubtedly one of the most important centres in the world for the art of inlay, where it originated under the rule of the Seljuk dynasty, although its golden age came during the reign of the Safavid monarchs. It requires precise craftsmanship and a great deal of patience and delicacy to create such exquisite pieces that decorate boxes, jewellery boxes and pen cases as well as embellish frames, clocks, vases and backgammon sets, among many other objects.

The technique used by the artists consists of creating a kind of mosaic from a pattern of regular polygons that can vary in the number of sides and then decorating the desired surface with them, which is usually made of wood or metal. For this work, long wooden rods, camel bone for the white colour and metal (brass is usually used for the golden tones) are joined together to form triangles that are then pressed and cut into very thin sheets, preferably 1 mm thick, which will be the ones that will be carefully adhered to the utensil that is to be decorated.

Among the most common geometric designs are star-shaped patterns, and in the most valuable pieces precious metals such as gold or silver are used, and bone is replaced by ivory. To give you an idea of ​​the complexity of this work, approximately 250 pieces of bone, wood and metal are needed to create just one cubic centimetre of khatam, and if the surface to be applied is curved, the sheet must be heated to make it flexible and therefore mouldable.

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