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

Tile Panel

ca. 1550-600 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Tiles from the same cartoon or stencil are found in the Salimiye madrasa in Damascus dating from 1566. In the 16th century, Damascus became an important Ottoman provincial capital giving rise to new building schemes faced with tilework. Potters came to Damascus to work on the tilework. The designs were inspired by Iznik patterns, but were freed of the formality of the strictly controlled court designs, instead the Syrian patterns are more spontaneous and exuberant. The colour palatte was also distinctive, relying on more softer colours than those favoured by Iznik potters in the 1540s, and without the use of a red. The designs have parallels in textile patterns which also have repeats.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 3 parts.

  • Tile
  • Tile
  • Tile
Materials and techniques
Fritware, polychrome underglaze painted, glazed
Brief description
Tile panel of three square tiles, fritware, painted in underglaze blue black and green; Damscus (Syria), ca. 1550-1600.
Physical description
Tile panel of three square tiles, fritware, painted in underglaze blue, black and sage-green with and arabesque quadrant motif. Painted wooden frame.
Dimensions
  • Overall conversion length: 59.1cm
  • Width: 19.7cm
Styles
Object history
Formerly in the Myers Collection.
Summary
Tiles from the same cartoon or stencil are found in the Salimiye madrasa in Damascus dating from 1566. In the 16th century, Damascus became an important Ottoman provincial capital giving rise to new building schemes faced with tilework. Potters came to Damascus to work on the tilework. The designs were inspired by Iznik patterns, but were freed of the formality of the strictly controlled court designs, instead the Syrian patterns are more spontaneous and exuberant. The colour palatte was also distinctive, relying on more softer colours than those favoured by Iznik potters in the 1540s, and without the use of a red. The designs have parallels in textile patterns which also have repeats.
Bibliographic reference
A tile panel with similar tiles is in the Robert Mouawad Private Museum in Beirut, see John Carswell,The Future of the Past, the Robert Mouawad Private Museum, Beirut, 2005, no. 103, pp.268-9.
Collection
Accession number
506 to B-1900

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Record createdDecember 31, 2008
Record URL
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