Dish with a woman teaching a child to read, after a design by Raphael
Lustred dish with a woman teaching a child to read
Maker
(ceramicist)
1500-1520 (active)
1500-1520 (active)
Title
Dish with a woman teaching a child to read, after a design by Raphael
Lustred dish with a woman teaching a child to read
Lustred dish with a woman teaching a child to read
Date of Production
c. 1520-40
Medium
tin-glazed earthenware
Dimensions
Diameter: 4o cm
Depth: 8.8 cm
Depth: 8.8 cm
Accession Number
O.1966.GP.75
Mode of Acquisition
Gambier Parry, bequest, 1966
Credit
The Courtauld, London (Samuel Courtauld Trust)
Location
On display
Keywords
Label Text
Lustred ceramics were a must-have luxury item of the fashionable Renaissance home. Lustre is made when a glazed and fired ceramic is painted with metal oxide pigments and fired again, at low temperature with restricted air supply. This process results in a metallic film that shimmers beautifully in candlelight. The technique of lustre originated in Iraq and Egypt and was brought to Spain by Arab potters in the 12th century. Around 1500, Italy developed its own specialist centres of lustred pottery in Deruta and Gubbio, two small towns in the central region of Umbria.
Provenance
Geremia Delsette, Bologna; probably Alexander Barker; acquired by Thomas Gambier Parry between about 1861 and 1875
Inscriptions
Inscription: V/IR/TUS.IN/ATIoNE./CoSIST/E
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