Yazar
Unknown
Basım Tarihi
1555
Basım Yeri
Iznik (made) Turkey -
Konu
Ceramics Islam
Tür
Diğer
Dil
Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital
Evet
Yazma
Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar
Diameter: 35.6cm
Kütüphane
Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası
C.1996-1910
Kayıt Numarası
C.1996-1910
Lokasyon
Middle East Section
Tarih
1555
Notlar
This dish is one of a group of similar wares that may be the work of a potter dubbed the 'Master of the Hyacinths'. He was associated with the ceramics produced in the kilns of Iznik, a town in north-west Anatolia. Motifs like the hyacinths and the jagged saz leaves shown here recall the designs on earlier Iznik ceramics. The treatment and spacing, however, looks forward to the Iznik ceramics made in the 1560s and 1570s. Iznik has given its name to some of the most accomplished ceramics produced in the Islamic Middle East. In the mid 15th century, potters there specialised in modest earthenware imitations of Chinese blue-and-white porcelain. But in the 1460s or 1470s, under the patronage of Sultan Mehmet the Conqueror, they began to manufacture bowls, dishes and other pieces of fritware that were elegant in shape and decoration. These wares were often very large.
Malzemeler ve teknikler
Fritware, polychrome underglaze painted, glazed Fritware Underglazing
Fiziksel açıklama
Dish, flat-bottomed with a wide and deep bowl, and slightly scalloped rim, white with painted colours. Lip is decorated on top surface with border of blue scrolls and dark green spirals and dashes. Bowl interior has image of spray of leaves and flowers, three large (hyacinths?) and some bell-like on long stalks, in dark blue, light blue, mauve and dark green. Dish exterior is decorated with sprigs of flowers.
Üslup
Iznik Ottoman