Arthur Pope

Arthur Upham Pope

Mausoleum of Arthur Pope and his wife Phyllis Ackerman in Isfahan.
Born February 7, 1881(1881-02-07)
Phenix, West Warwick, Rhode Island, U.S.
Died September 3, 1969(1969-09-03) (aged 88)
Shiraz, Iran
Nationality American
Fields Archaeology
Persian art
Institutions University of California, Berkeley
Amherst College
Asia Institute, Shiraz University
Alma mater Brown University
Academic advisors Alexander Meiklejohn
Notable students Jay Gluck
Influenced Richard N. Frye
Spouse Bertha Louise Clark
Phyllis Ackerman

Arthur Upham Pope (1881–1969), was an American archaeologist and historian of Persian art.

Born in Phenix, Rhode Island, graduated from Worcester Academy in 1899, and taught at Amherst College and the University of California. He married fellow Persian art historian, Phyllis Ackerman, in 1920. In 1923, Pope was appointed director of the California Palace of the Legion of Honor. Two years later, he went to Iran to complete research and serve as an art advisor to the Iranian government. He traveled around the world giving lectures and curating exhibitions of Persian art. Between 1925-1927, Pope and Ackerman would serve as chief interior designers of the Ahwahnee Hotel in Yosemite National Park. In 1930, he edited the Survey of Persian Art. In 1934 he hired the budding Islamicist Richard Ettinghausen. The International Association of Iranian Art elected him president in 1960.

Pope and Ackerman were pioneers in the study of the arts of Asia, with a paramount dedication to Persian art, history, heritage and culture, and its interrelations. Their efforts led to the establishment in 1925 of the American Institute for Persian Art and Archaeology, which later became the Asia Institute, in New York City and their unique programs of research, publications, exhibitions and educational instruction continued at the Institute and around the world until their retirement. Pope is often credited with being responsible for helping revive the spirit of Iran's glorious past in the Pahlavi era.

In 1964, during a state visit to Iran, Pope and Ackerman were formally invited to move The Asia Institute in Shiraz as an independent research center of publication and study, which would be housed in the Narenjestan, the beautiful compound of the Ghavam ol-Molk Shirazi. They accepted this generous offer and following months of planning, packing and organization, they returned permanently to Iran in 1966.

Pope and Ackerman were to spend their final days in Iran and upon their death, they were provided with a magnificent mausoleum built in Professor Pope Park on the banks of the Zayandeh River in their beloved city of Isfahan. This unique tribute by Iran for two of America's pioneer scholars of Persian studies, and their remarkable achievements during lives dedicated to art, culture, beauty and heritage, is best told in the biography of Pope and Ackerman, Surveyors of Persian Art: A Documentary Biography of Arthur Upham Pope & Phyllis Ackerman edited by Jay Gluck, Noël Siver and Sumi Hiramoto Gluck.

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