Saz style "in which mythical creatures derived from Chinese or Islamic sources move through an enchanted forest made up of oversized composite blossoms and feathery leaves, has parallels in the art of the
Aqqoyunlu and
Safavid courts at
Tabriz". It is no coincidence that two named artists associated with it,
Şahkulu and
Veli Can, both came to
Istanbul from Tabriz, in c. 1520 and 1580 respectively. Şahkulu played a great role in the formation of saz style, and Veli Can took part in its later phase. According to
Walter B. Denny, there is a great difference between the early and later phases of the saz style. The clarity, spontaneity and almost reckless qualities of earlier drawings gave way to a concern for finish, texture and far more balanced composition. Apart from saz ornament, drawings in saz style used many other motifs, often derived from China, which formed compositions of complex foliage usually intertwined with birds, beasts, and cloud bands. For them, Turkish scholars use the term
hatayi, or "in the
Cathayan manner". Chinese mythological creatures include the
dragon,
phoenix and
Qilin, other creatures like the
simurgh or
peri (in Western sources often called angels) are borrowed from Iranian tradition. One of the specific motifs is the "suicidal" leaf, which, twisted, pierces itself. Veli Can seems to be primarily interested in figural subjects, and apart from figures of peri, he is associated with many pictures of young men and women. Although it started during the reign of
Suleiman (1520–1566), from whom Şahkulu received many favours, the saz style reached its apogee under
Murad III (1574–1595), for example in an album (
muraqqa) compiled for the future sultan in 1572–1573 (
Österreich. Nbib., Cod. Mixt. 313). Murad III was the most important patron of the style and his death in 1595, accompanied by ongoing deterioration of court workshops in time of
price revolution, resulted in its decline. After 1600 the saz style ceased to be an important, but still, it showed an amazing tenacity. Because it had become virtually synonymous with the glorious days of the Ottoman Empire, it was the subject of self-conscious attempts at revival, for example in tiles of
Baghdad Kiosk in the 1630s or painted-wood decorations of the kiosk attached to the
Valide Mosque in c. 1663. Countless bookbindings and endpapers kept the tradition alive into the nineteenth century, and its widespread diffusion have left imprints as diverse as decorations of
Aleppo Room (in
Museum of Islamic Art, Berlin) or patterned "
bizarre silks" woven in
France in the early eighteenth century. == Gallery ==