Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Medieval & Renaissance, Room 63, The Edwin and Susan Davies Gallery

Tazza

1500-1550 (made)
Place of origin

The colourless, fragile glass of this dish deliberately mimics the shape and embossed decoration of metalwork vessels. Gilding and enamelling add to the precious effect. Contemporary treatises advised wealthy householders to display objects such as these in the rooms where they received visitors, to proclaim their taste and discernment. However, the dishes may also have had a practical function, to hold the candied fruit that was brought to conclude a meal for important guests.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
blown, using a dip-mould, enamelled and gilt
Brief description
Tazza, enamelled glass, Italy (Venice), 1500-1550
Physical description
Shallow glass dish on a low foot. Enamelled and gilt decoration depicting a dragon in the centre.
Dimensions
  • Greatest width width: 24.0cm
  • Height: 8.2cm
  • Diameter: 24.3cm
  • Weight: 0.44kg
Measured for the Medieval and Renaissance Galleries
Style
Object history
Bought from the Soulages collection in 1859 for £ 5.10
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 glasses and bottles which were used in much greater quantities.
Elaborately decorated glass dishes were used for display or occasional practical use at the table during special banquets. Small dishes on a low foot, like this example, could be used for serving cold food, most likely fruit or sweetmeats, during one of the desert courses.
Summary
The colourless, fragile glass of this dish deliberately mimics the shape and embossed decoration of metalwork vessels. Gilding and enamelling add to the precious effect. Contemporary treatises advised wealthy householders to display objects such as these in the rooms where they received visitors, to proclaim their taste and discernment. However, the dishes may also have had a practical function, to hold the candied fruit that was brought to conclude a meal for important guests.
Bibliographic reference
Tait, 'Golden Age of Venetian Glass', 1979,cat. No.5 for similar tazza. Also similar tazza in Museum fur Kunsthandwerk, Frankfurt, cat.No.122 p.66
Collection
Accession number
5501-1859

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Record createdDecember 13, 1997
Record URL
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