Bowl
ca. 1510-15 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
St. Jerome is one of the commonest saints on Italian Renaissance maiolica. He is normally portrayed in the wilderness, kneeling before a cross, his hand in a stone with which he penitentially beats his chest. On the present bowl the saint is portraited as a scholar in his study, with his lion companion; a popular iconography in Renaissance painting. The figure of the saint derives from a woodcut from the 'Biblia Italica', an illlustrated Italian translation of the Bible, first published in 1490 by Lucantonio Giunta in Venice (called the 'Malermi Bible' after its translator).
The type of ornament on the border, with trophies and putti painted with strong colours on a dark blue ground, relates the plate to a famous bowl in the Lehhman Collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, signed as made in 1508 in Castel Durante, in the Duchy of Urbino, by the potter 'Zoan Maria' (a form of the name Giovanni Maria). Although close in style, the painting of the present bowl, does not match the quality of the Lehman bowl and it can be attributed to a painter close to Giovanni Maria.
The type of ornament on the border, with trophies and putti painted with strong colours on a dark blue ground, relates the plate to a famous bowl in the Lehhman Collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, signed as made in 1508 in Castel Durante, in the Duchy of Urbino, by the potter 'Zoan Maria' (a form of the name Giovanni Maria). Although close in style, the painting of the present bowl, does not match the quality of the Lehman bowl and it can be attributed to a painter close to Giovanni Maria.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Tin-glazed earthenware |
Brief description | Bowl depicting St Jerome; probably made in Castel Durante, ca 1510 |
Physical description | Bowl, painted in dark blue, yellow, brown, copper green, manganese purple and opaque white. In the middle, St Jerome translating the Bible at a desk with a lectern and a crucifix beside him and a lion before him, in an open landscape. |
Dimensions |
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Style | |
Gallery label | BOWL with St Jerome
About 1515
St Jerome, identified by the lion at his side, is often portrayed as a scholar. Here he is copying from a book placed on a revolving lectern nearby. He wears a monk's habit and has his cardinal's hat from the front of his desk.
Italy, Castel Durante
Tin-glazed earthenware (maiolica)
Museum no. C.2148-1910(2008) |
Credit line | Bequeathed by George Salting, Esq. |
Object history | George Salting bequest Historical significance: The depiction of St Jerome copied with slight modifications from a woodcut in the edition of Malermi's Italian translation of the Bible published in Venice in 1490 by Lucantonio Giunta. |
Subject depicted | |
Summary | St. Jerome is one of the commonest saints on Italian Renaissance maiolica. He is normally portrayed in the wilderness, kneeling before a cross, his hand in a stone with which he penitentially beats his chest. On the present bowl the saint is portraited as a scholar in his study, with his lion companion; a popular iconography in Renaissance painting. The figure of the saint derives from a woodcut from the 'Biblia Italica', an illlustrated Italian translation of the Bible, first published in 1490 by Lucantonio Giunta in Venice (called the 'Malermi Bible' after its translator). The type of ornament on the border, with trophies and putti painted with strong colours on a dark blue ground, relates the plate to a famous bowl in the Lehhman Collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, signed as made in 1508 in Castel Durante, in the Duchy of Urbino, by the potter 'Zoan Maria' (a form of the name Giovanni Maria). Although close in style, the painting of the present bowl, does not match the quality of the Lehman bowl and it can be attributed to a painter close to Giovanni Maria. |
Bibliographic reference | Rackham B., Italian Maiolica, London, Faber &Faber, 1952
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Other number | 529 - Rackham (1977) |
Collection | |
Accession number | C.2148-1910 |
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Record created | March 16, 2006 |
Record URL |
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