Pilgrim Bottle thumbnail 1
Pilgrim Bottle thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Medieval & Renaissance, Room 63, The Edwin and Susan Davies Gallery

Pilgrim Bottle

ca. 1575-1587 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Italy is a peninsula fortunately placed in the centre of the Mediterranean to take advantage of numerous trade routes linking East and West. Throughout the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, the Italian city states imported ceramics from abroad, especially from Syria, Turkey and Spain (parts of which were under Islamic control until 1492). The forms and decoration of early Italian maiolica betray their Islamic origin and, even after Italian artists had developed their own style of ornamentation, Eastern influences were still occasionally apparent. By the mid-fifteenth century porcelain from the Far East and porcelain-like objects from the Islamic world were officially documented in Italian collections and were, therefore, more readily available sources of inspiration for designs.
The manufacture of porcelain was a closely-guarded secret in the Far East. Porcelain objects, therefore, were highly prized and much coveted by collectors in the West, eager to possess and even recreate such precious and inherently mysterious objects. Cafaggiolo, outside Florence, specialised in maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware) with blue and white decoration of scrolling foliage, based on Eastern examples. However, in about 1575 Grand Duke Francesco I de'Medici hired a potter from the Levant and instructed him to produce porcelain. The result was a soft-paste fritware comprising Vicenza clay and ground glass, decorated with hazy painting and eggshell glaze. The production of 'Medici porcelain' did not continue beyond the death of the Grand Duke, in 1587.
The decoration of these wares was indebted to a variety of sources comprising European grotesques, Chinese Porcelain and Iznik pottery, the latter of which incorporated various foliate and floral patterns and began arriving from Turkey by the sixteenth century. At a time when Italian artists had developed their own visual idiom, such imitations of Eastern products testify to the continuing attraction and value of the more exotic product.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Soft-paste 'Medici' porcelain painted in underglaze blue and moulded
Brief description
Pilgrim bottle of soft-paste 'Medici' porcelain, painted in underglaze blue, Florence, ca. 1575-1587.
Physical description
Pilgrim bottle of soft-paste 'Medici' porcelain painted in underglaze glue. With a flattened pear-shaped broad body and a slender tapering neck having a flange for a metal cover. Painted in underglaze blue with foliage and grotesque winged heads and pendant draperies. Shoulders with moulded grotesques, as handles, and open-mouthed masks with loops above.
Dimensions
  • Height: 20cm
  • Width: 15.2cm
  • Depth: 9.8cm
  • Weight: 0.68kg
Measured for the Medieval and Renaissance Galleries
Gallery label
Pilgrim-Bottle Soft-paste 'Medici Porcelain' Made in Florence about 1575-1587 Salting Bequest C.2301-1910 (Label draft attributed to John V. G. Mallet, ca. 1995)(ca. 1995)
Credit line
Bequeathed by George Salting, Esq.
Object history
Historical significance: One decorative impulse of the Renaissance was the desire to recreate porcelain, the recipe for which was a closely guarded secret of the Far East. Cafaggiolo, outside Florence, specialised in maiolica with blue and white decoration of scrolling foliage, based on Eastern examples. However, in about 1575 Grand Duke Francesco I de'Medici hired a potter from the Levant and instructed him to produce porcelain. The result was a soft-paste fritware comprising Vicenza clay and ground glass, decorated with hazy painting and eggshell glaze. The production of 'Medici porcelain' did not continue beyond the death of the Grand Duke, in 1587.
Historical context
Italy is a peninsular fortunately placed, in the centre of the Mediterranean, to take advantage of numerous trade routes linking East and West. Throughout the Renaissance, Italians continued to import ceramics from abroad, especially from Syria, Turkey and Spain (the southern part of which was under Islamic rule). The forms and decoration of early Italian maiolica betray their Islamic origin and, even after Italian artists had developed their own style of ornamentation, Eastern influences were still apparent. By the mid-fifteenth century porcelain from the Far East and porcelain-like objects from the Islamic world appear officially documented in Italian collections, rendering them sufficiently accessible sources of design.
The manufacture of porcelain was the closely guarded secret of the Far East. Porcelain objects, therefore, were highly prized and much coveted by collectors in the West, eager to possess such precious and inherently mysterious objects.
Subjects depicted
Summary
Italy is a peninsula fortunately placed in the centre of the Mediterranean to take advantage of numerous trade routes linking East and West. Throughout the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, the Italian city states imported ceramics from abroad, especially from Syria, Turkey and Spain (parts of which were under Islamic control until 1492). The forms and decoration of early Italian maiolica betray their Islamic origin and, even after Italian artists had developed their own style of ornamentation, Eastern influences were still occasionally apparent. By the mid-fifteenth century porcelain from the Far East and porcelain-like objects from the Islamic world were officially documented in Italian collections and were, therefore, more readily available sources of inspiration for designs.
The manufacture of porcelain was a closely-guarded secret in the Far East. Porcelain objects, therefore, were highly prized and much coveted by collectors in the West, eager to possess and even recreate such precious and inherently mysterious objects. Cafaggiolo, outside Florence, specialised in maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware) with blue and white decoration of scrolling foliage, based on Eastern examples. However, in about 1575 Grand Duke Francesco I de'Medici hired a potter from the Levant and instructed him to produce porcelain. The result was a soft-paste fritware comprising Vicenza clay and ground glass, decorated with hazy painting and eggshell glaze. The production of 'Medici porcelain' did not continue beyond the death of the Grand Duke, in 1587.
The decoration of these wares was indebted to a variety of sources comprising European grotesques, Chinese Porcelain and Iznik pottery, the latter of which incorporated various foliate and floral patterns and began arriving from Turkey by the sixteenth century. At a time when Italian artists had developed their own visual idiom, such imitations of Eastern products testify to the continuing attraction and value of the more exotic product.
Bibliographic reference
Baker, Malcolm, and Brenda Richardson (eds.), A Grand Design: The Art of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London: V&A Publications, 1999.
Collection
Accession number
C.2301-1910

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Record createdNovember 25, 2003
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