Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ceramics, Room 137, The Curtain Foundation Gallery

Pouring Bowl

1740-50 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

A pottery industry was well-established in Kütahya by the 17th century: there are references to 'cup makers' of Kütahya in 1608. In 1715 a French merchant, Paul Lucas, based in Istanbul sent to France a dozen coffee cups and saucers, bowls, two rosewater bottles, two salts and two writing sets. The decoration is stylistically similar to a documentary basin in the San Lazzaro Armenian monastery in Venice. The basin is inscribed with a date in the Armenian calender for 1193 or 1744 AD. Yolande Crowe has linked the source of this type of exotic decoration to colourful contemporary Indian painted and printed cottons known as "chintz", made on the Coromandel coast.The restricted blue and black palette would have been more economical involving fewer costly firings.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Fritware, underglaze painted in black and blue, glazed
Brief description
Pouring bowl, fritware, painted in shades of blue enamel and black, Turkey (Kütahya), 1740-50.
Physical description
Pouring bowl, fritware, painted in shades of blue enamel under a clear glaze. Low cylindrical vessel with rounded base rim applied with a broad short angular projecting spout. Painted outside with formal chrysanthemums and other flowers in shades of blue,outlined in black. At the top is a narrow border of trellis diaper.
Dimensions
  • Height: 7.6cm
  • Without spout diameter: 20cm
Converted from the register
Style
Marks and inscriptions
A spray of leaves (Painted in blue)
Gallery label
Mark, a spray painted in blue. TURKISH (KUTAHIA); first hald of 18th century. Bought. C.68-1930.(1954-2005)
Production
label
Subjects depicted
Summary
A pottery industry was well-established in Kütahya by the 17th century: there are references to 'cup makers' of Kütahya in 1608. In 1715 a French merchant, Paul Lucas, based in Istanbul sent to France a dozen coffee cups and saucers, bowls, two rosewater bottles, two salts and two writing sets. The decoration is stylistically similar to a documentary basin in the San Lazzaro Armenian monastery in Venice. The basin is inscribed with a date in the Armenian calender for 1193 or 1744 AD. Yolande Crowe has linked the source of this type of exotic decoration to colourful contemporary Indian painted and printed cottons known as "chintz", made on the Coromandel coast.The restricted blue and black palette would have been more economical involving fewer costly firings.
Collection
Accession number
C.68-1930

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
Record URL
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