Footed Bowl thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Medieval & Renaissance, Room 10a, The Françoise and Georges Selz Gallery

Footed Bowl

1475 - 1525 (made)
Place of origin

Medieval diners drank from cups or shallow bowls. These were often made of precious metal or costly glass to demonstrate the wealth of the host and to honour the guests. Some included semi-precious stones. Large cups with lids were used for communal ritual drinking at feasts. They were occasionally inscribed with mottoes or a prayer, echoing the grace that was said at the end of a meal.


Object details

Object type
Materials and techniques
blue glass, enamelled and gilt
Brief description
Footed bowl, Italy (Venice), , 1475-1525, 473-1899 .
Physical description
Blue glass footed bowl, with white, blue, red and turquoise enamel and gilt. A leaf design around the base is in turquoise around a red stem.
Dimensions
  • Greatest width diameter: 25.3cm
  • Depth: 15cm
  • Weight: 0.68kg
Measured for the Medieval and Renaissance Galleries
Style
Object history
Ex collection Bardini, Florence.
Historical context
Venetian enamelled and gilt glass was a luxury product exported all over Italy and beyond. The glassmakers of Venice had an excellent and wide spread reputation for high-quality colourless glass and fine workmanship in gilding and enamelling.
Account books and inventories of the time sometimes mention small numbers of 'worked' or 'gilded' glass and often this is stated to have come from Venice or Murano, the Venetian island on which the glass industry was concentrated. The value of such items was often many times as great as that of ordinary beakers and bottles which were used in much greater quantities for daily use at the dinner table.
The more valuable enamelled and gilt glasses were almost certainly used for special occasions only. Their shapes were also more varied, including footed beakers and bowls, cooling vessels, dishes, ewers, basins and salts. The fact that such items were specially mentioned in inventories showed how they were treasured by their owners from the start. They were more likely to be kept in the bedchamber, in painted wooden chests, rather than in the kitchen where the more ordinary dining utensils were kept.
Footed bowls like this probably had a variety of uses, but certainly had a function as cooling vessel. Filled with water they were used to keep fruit and other food fresh.

A tazza of similar shape and with practically the same decoration was in the Rothschild Collection, Galerie Fischer, auction catalogue, Luzern, August 31 1937 No. 491.
Summary
Medieval diners drank from cups or shallow bowls. These were often made of precious metal or costly glass to demonstrate the wealth of the host and to honour the guests. Some included semi-precious stones. Large cups with lids were used for communal ritual drinking at feasts. They were occasionally inscribed with mottoes or a prayer, echoing the grace that was said at the end of a meal.
Bibliographic reference
Exhib.in Three Great Centuries of Venetian Glass, Corning 1958, catalogue number 41.
Other number
Collection
Accession number
473-1899

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Record createdDecember 13, 1997
Record URL
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