Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Beehive Cover

View through Harvard Museums
This ceramic disk was used to cover one end of a beehive; its round hole admitted bees to a cylinder made of mud and reeds or cane, which was laid horizontally in a stack with other hives to protect them from winter weather. Such beehive covers have been used in Iran at least since the early eighteenth century. Talismanic designs or inscriptions, thought to aid the art of beekeeping, decorated these disks. This example features two long-necked birds, perhaps peacocks, facing each other. Their bodies are crosshatched, and flowering plants appear to sprout from their elaborate tails. Repeating floral motifs surround the birds, and the segment below them, containing the hole, is decorated to suggest a pool of water. Light cobalt is casually applied in the empty white areas and around the periphery. The beehive cover is intact except for chipped edges.
Department of Islamic & Later Indian Art Stanford and Norma Jean Calderwood Belmont MA (by 1978-2002) gift; to Harvard Art Museums 2002. Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum The Norma Jean Calderwood Collection of Islamic Art
image-zoom
Title: Beehive Cover
Description:
This ceramic disk was used to cover one end of a beehive; its round hole admitted bees to a cylinder made of mud and reeds or cane, which was laid horizontally in a stack with other hives to protect them from winter weather.
Such beehive covers have been used in Iran at least since the early eighteenth century.
Talismanic designs or inscriptions, thought to aid the art of beekeeping, decorated these disks.
This example features two long-necked birds, perhaps peacocks, facing each other.
Their bodies are crosshatched, and flowering plants appear to sprout from their elaborate tails.
Repeating floral motifs surround the birds, and the segment below them, containing the hole, is decorated to suggest a pool of water.
Light cobalt is casually applied in the empty white areas and around the periphery.
The beehive cover is intact except for chipped edges.

Related Results

Woven
Woven
Coin weave of unbleached white and red two-toed wool yarn. The cover is woven on half width and is sewn on the back with woolen thread. A few pieces on the back, along the long sid...
Small Covered Bowl with Tortoiseshell Glaze
Small Covered Bowl with Tortoiseshell Glaze
This two-piece set includes a U-shaped bowl and a flat cover with a tiny, pierced, strap handle at the indented heart of the cover's lightly swollen center. The bowl's thin walls e...
Manuscript of the Tuhfat al-Ahrar (The Gift to the Noble) by Jami, with lacquer binding
Manuscript of the Tuhfat al-Ahrar (The Gift to the Noble) by Jami, with lacquer binding
The manuscript opens with a faded ink drawing of a seated bearded man holding prayer beads in a landscape. The drawing is water damaged, and the inscription attributing the work to...
Joseph Beuys, George Brecht, Robert Filliou, Ansgar Nierhoff, Dieter Roth, Daniel Spoerri, and Wolf Vostell, Kunstlerpost (1969)
Joseph Beuys, George Brecht, Robert Filliou, Ansgar Nierhoff, Dieter Roth, Daniel Spoerri, and Wolf Vostell, Kunstlerpost (1969)
8 Multiples by: Hans Peter Alvermann: plastic rifle cartridge, length 7 cm; Joseph Beuys: Untitled, margarine and white chocolate in plastic cover 32.5 x 23.5 cm, stamped with oil ...
Monument in honor of soldiers of balloon troops killed in the war 1918-1920
Monument in honor of soldiers of balloon troops killed in the war 1918-1920
Monument in honor of the soldiers of balloon troops killed in the 1918-1920 war, in 1937 set in the City Park on Bydgoski Suburb (on the ascent above the Blades and Dead Vistula). ...
Monument in honor of soldiers of balloon troops killed in the war 1918-1920
Monument in honor of soldiers of balloon troops killed in the war 1918-1920
Monument in honor of the soldiers of balloon troops killed in the 1918-1920 war, in 1937 set in the City Park on Bydgoski Suburb (on the ascent above the Blades and Dead Vistula). ...

Back to Top