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9,345 results for Ten Kings of Hell

Image for Kings of Brightness in Japanese Esoteric Buddhist Art
Essay

Kings of Brightness in Japanese Esoteric Buddhist Art

October 1, 2013

By Sinéad Vilbar

Wrathful in countenance, the Kings of Brightness are staunch protectors of the Buddhist Law, as well as masters of channeling unruly passions toward constructive ends.
Image for Ten Reasons to Visit *Silla: Korea's Golden Kingdom*
editorial

Ten Reasons to Visit Silla: Korea's Golden Kingdom

February 14, 2014

By Denise Patry Leidy and Soyoung Lee

With just ten days left to see Silla: Korea's Golden Kingdom, curators Soyoung Lee and Denise Patry Leidy list their top ten reasons to visit (or revisit) these exquisite treasures.
Image for Kings and Queens of Egypt
Essay

Kings and Queens of Egypt

October 1, 2004

By Susan Allen

The living king was associated with the god Horus and the dead king with the god Osiris, but the ancient Egyptians were well aware that the king was mortal.
Image for A Three Kings Day Reunion
editorial

A Three Kings Day Reunion

January 6, 2014

By C. Griffith Mann

C. Griffith Mann, Michel David-Weill Curator in Charge of the Department of Medieval Art and The Cloisters, describes why Three Kings Day is especially auspicious for the Museum's collection this year.
Image for A King's Book of Kings: The Shah-nameh of Shah Tahmasp
Composed in the tenth century by the poet Firdowsi, the Shah-nameh or Book of Kings is Iran's central literary work, a historical epic peopled with monarchs—some of inspiring goodness, others of unmatched wickedness—handsome paladins, beautiful maidens, malevolent witches, and treacherous demons. The particular manuscript of the Shah-nameh introduced here by Stuart Cary Welch, Curator of Indian and Islamic Painting at the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University, is the most sumptuous one ever produced. Containing scores of paintings where other sixteenth-century Shah-nameh manuscripts contain a dozen, the Houghton Shah-nameh (identified by the name of its owner, Arthur A. Houghton, Jr.) is thought to have been commissioned about 1522 by Shah Isma'il, the founder of the Safavid dynasty, as a present for his son, Prince Tahmasp. Court artists and craftsmen continued their work on the 759 folios for the better part of two decades; as a consequence, the book offers a fascinating mixture of artistic styles. The extraordinary quality of the paintings was known even in Shah Tahmasp's time. One commentator wrote then of Sultan Muhammad's page representing The court of Gayumars: "The boldest painters hung their heads in shame before it." While that superb image, reproduced here in color and gold, is called by Stuart Cary Welch "perhaps the greatest painting in Iranian art" others of the pages he has selected for color reproduction and special comment are clearly in the same area of merit. (A number of these 8 leaves, along with others not reproduced here, were presented to The Metropolitan Museum of Art by Mr. Houghton in 1970). In addition to tutoring the reader in the elements of early Safavid painting and the differing personalities of the masters who contributed to Shah Tahmasp's book, Mr. Welch explains the action in each of the illustrated scenes. Pictorial "close-ups" for each scene permit one to savor their details, exquisite, charming, or astonishing. When A King's Book of Kings first appeared, in 1972, as part of the 2500th anniversary celebration of the founding of the Persian empire, reviewers called it "important and handsome" and "a delight, an education!' And so it is.
Image for Taking a Closer Look at the Medallions in *Carpets for Kings*
editorial

Taking a Closer Look at the Medallions in Carpets for Kings

March 22, 2017

By Courtney A. Stewart

Courtney Stewart, senior research assistant in the Department of Islamic Art, takes a closer look at the medallions in the 16th–17th century Persian rugs currently on display in the exhibition Carpets for Kings: Six Masterpieces of Iranian Weaving.
Image for Folios from the Great Mongol _Shahnama_ (Book of Kings)
Essay

Folios from the Great Mongol Shahnama (Book of Kings)

October 1, 2003

By Qamar Adamjee and Stefano Carboni

The Shahnama, with its rich detailing of the largely lost material culture of the Mongol court, presents a view of the contemporary Ilkhanid world, transforming a popular text into a splendid visual document of the period.
Image for Ten Kings of Hell

Jin Chushi (Chinese, active late 12th century)

Date: before 1195
Accession Number: 30.76.293

Image for Ten Kings of Hell

Jin Chushi (Chinese, active late 12th century)

Date: before 1195
Accession Number: 30.76.291

Image for Ten Kings of Hell

Jin Chushi (Chinese, active late 12th century)

Date: before 1195
Accession Number: 30.76.292

Image for Ten Kings of Hell

Jin Chushi (Chinese, active late 12th century)

Date: before 1195
Accession Number: 30.76.290

Image for Ten Kings of Hell

Jin Chushi (Chinese, active late 12th century)

Date: before 1195
Accession Number: 30.76.294

Image for Christ's Descent into Hell

Follower of Hieronymus Bosch (Netherlandish, second quarter 16th century)

Accession Number: 26.244

Image for Large Kneeling Statue of Hatshepsut

Date: ca. 1479–1458 B.C.
Accession Number: 30.3.1

Image for The Hell Courtesan

Seikei (Japanese, active second half of the 19th century)

Date: late 19th century
Accession Number: 29.100.517

Image for King Arthur (from the Heroes Tapestries)

Date: ca. 1400–1410
Accession Number: 32.130.3a; 47.101.4

Image for Lintel of Amenemhat I and Deities

Date: ca. 1981–1952 B.C.
Accession Number: 08.200.5