Ewer thumbnail 1
Ewer thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Islamic Middle East, Room 42, The Jameel Gallery

Ewer

ca. 1520 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The angular shape of this ceramic ewer is based on a metal example. This piece has been damaged and repaired with metal mounts. A number of large basins survive which were probably made as sets with equally large ewers. None of these large ewers has survived but this smaller one shows what they might have looked like.

This piece was made in the small town of Iznik in north-west Anatolia. Iznik has given its name to some of the most accomplished ceramics produced in the Islamic Middle East. In the mid 15th century, potters there specialised in modest earthenware imitations of Chinese blue-and-white porcelain. But in the 1460s or 1470s, under the patronage of Sultan Mehmet the Conqueror, they began to manufacture bowls, dishes and other pieces of fritware that were elegant in shape and decoration, and often very large.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Fritware, polychrome underglaze painted, glazed; later silver mounts.
Brief description
Blue-and-white angular ewer, restored in the 19th century with silver mounts, Turkey (probably Iznik), ca. 1520.
Physical description
Blue and white angular ewer, decorated with arabesques and stylized clouds. Restored in the 19th century with silver mounts.
Dimensions
  • Height: 22.3cm
  • Including spout width: 15.5cm
  • Depth: 11cm
Styles
Gallery label
  • Jameel Gallery Blue-and-White Ewer Turkey, probably Iznik About 1520 The large basins in this case were probably made as sets with equally large ewers, but none of the ewers has survived. This smaller ewer, and that to the right, show what they may have looked like. Their angular shapes were based on metal ewers. Both have been repaired with metal mounts after they were damaged. Fritware painted under the glaze with silver mounts Museum no. C.2008-1910. Bequest of George Salting(Jameel Gallery)
  • EWER Fritware with underglaze painted decoration TURKEY (made at IZNIK); about 1510 Salting Bequest Restored with silver mounts in the nineteenth century(Old gallery label)
Credit line
Salting Bequest
Historical context
The scrolling arabesques and stylized cloud bands on this little ewer recall earlier Islamic ornament; but the design has become more open and free, looking forward to the classical Iznik style of hand-painted floral motifs. The metal mounts were added as repairs later, possibly in the nineteenth century.
Subject depicted
Summary
The angular shape of this ceramic ewer is based on a metal example. This piece has been damaged and repaired with metal mounts. A number of large basins survive which were probably made as sets with equally large ewers. None of these large ewers has survived but this smaller one shows what they might have looked like.

This piece was made in the small town of Iznik in north-west Anatolia. Iznik has given its name to some of the most accomplished ceramics produced in the Islamic Middle East. In the mid 15th century, potters there specialised in modest earthenware imitations of Chinese blue-and-white porcelain. But in the 1460s or 1470s, under the patronage of Sultan Mehmet the Conqueror, they began to manufacture bowls, dishes and other pieces of fritware that were elegant in shape and decoration, and often very large.
Bibliographic reference
Nurhan Atasoy and Julian Raby, Iznik: The Pottery of Ottoman Turkey (London: Alexandria Press, 1989), fig. 97, p. 97.
Collection
Accession number
C.2008-1910

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Record createdNovember 28, 2003
Record URL
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