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Plate
Jacopo - Enlarge image
Plate
- Place of origin:
Cafaggiolo, Italy (made)
- Date:
1510 (made)
- Artist/Maker:
Jacopo (Maestro) (probably, painted by)
- Materials and Techniques:
Tin-glazed earthenware, painted in colours
- Museum number:
1717-1855
- Gallery location:
World Ceramics, room 145, case 48
During the Renaissance a distinction was drawn between fine art and the decorative arts. Maiolica painters were regarded as artisans who copied or freely followed printed sources or designs provided by major artists, but some regarded themselves as artists in their own right and signed their work. This dish shows a maiolica painter at work, magnificently dressed and watched by wealthy patrons. It was made at Cafaggiolo, a small potters' workshop set up in the grounds of a Medici villa near Florence to satisfy the needs of its aristocratic owners. It was probably painted by Maestro Jacopo, one of the most skilled maiolica painters of his time, here clearly making a statement about his aspirations as a fine artist and about his noble patronage.
It was once mistakenly thought that the artist shown was Raphael (1483-1520), painting a maiolica dish for his important patrons.







