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A work made of glazed ceramic.

Vessel Fragment with Bird Decoration

Mamluk dynasty (1250–1517), 15th century

Islamic; Fustat (now Cairo), Egypt

Old Cairo

This style of blue brushwork on a white background originated in China during the Tang dynasty (618–906), but instead of featuring a crane—common in Chinese imagery—the stout and short-legged bird on this ceramic fragment resembles an Egyptian gull. Chinese ceramics reached Egypt via the Silk Road, a network of trade routes that stretched from East Asia to East Africa and Southern Europe. Artisans inspired by Chinese porcelain made fritware like this vessel in Fustat, the capital of the Mamluk dynasty (1250–1517). Frit refers to the powdered glass, quartz, or glaze added to the clay base, which, when fired at low temperatures, creates a smooth blank surface ideal for decorative brushwork.

An artisan signed their name on the bottom of this vessel in Arabic as “work of al-Shāy.” Al-Shāy was likely a member of a large workshop of ceramicists producing similar works in 15th-century Fustat. It was fairly uncommon for an artist to sign their work in Islamic art, but multiple vessels of this type of Mamluk ware have an artist’s name inscribed under the foot.

Glazed ceramic

Arts of Africa