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Collections

Parviz Tanavoli
Lion and Sword III1976

Not on view
Hand-knotted or flat-woven textile depicting a stylized, angular lion-like creature holding a curved dagger, in black, blue, red, and green on a cream ground with a dark border
Artist or Maker
Parviz Tanavoli
Iran, born 1937, active Canada and Iran
Title
Lion and Sword III
Date Made
1976
Medium
Bijar weave
Dimensions
62 3/16 × 90 7/8 in. (157.99 × 230.89 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Hope Warschaw through the 2018 Collectors Committee
Accession Number
M.2018.118.1
Classification
Textiles
Collecting Area
Art of the Middle East: Contemporary
Curatorial Notes

One of the founders of the Saqqakhana school, Parviz Tanavoli, in his "lion and sword" carpets, made use of a typically Persian medium while focusing on a traditional emblem of kingship and the Iranian state—a lion with the sun rising from its back. Given that the lion and sun with sword was the symbol of Pahlavi Iran, its use in the carpets, including with what appears to be an antique lock on the animal’s hind leg, suggests a subtle form of political commentary; it also reinforces the inherent Shi‘ism of the image.

Selected Bibliography
  • Komaroff, Linda. In the Fields of Empty Days: The Intersection of Past and Present in Iranian Art. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Munich; New York: DelMonico Books-Prestel, 2018.