Antique
Continental Pottery 1
Continental Pottery
With the aid of methods learned from Near Eastern
potters the Moorish conquerors of Spain established
a number of potteries. There, they produced an earthenware
decorated brilliantly in a copper-coloured lustre,
known as Hispano-Moresque ware. With the reconquest
of Spain and the expelling of the Moors, the making
of this and other pottery was continued by the Spaniards
themselves. These wares reached Italy in the fifteenth
century by way of Majorca, and the name of that island,
where they were supposed wrongly to have been made,
was given to them in a corrupted form: majolica.
Italian-made majolica, a tin-glazed earthenware
that is comparable to the faience of France,
the Delft of Holland and the delftware of England,
was at first an imitation of the imported product,
but it soon achieved a style of its own. It was made
principally between the fifteenth and seventeenth
centuries, and although some was made after the latter
date it has neither the interest nor the importance
of the earlier pieces. The Italian ware was sent
to other European countries, and inspired their potters
in turn to produce ware of a comparable high standard.
The painting of majolica is its greatest beauty and
the artists who did it were masters of both line
and colour. Not only were the nearly flat surfaces
of dishes used for coloured pictures that remind
us of the glory of the Italy of the early sixteenth
century, but the round pot, known as an alharello,
was equally lavishly and diversely painted. The chemist's
shop of the time was a general meeting-place as well
as a medical emporium, and the shelves held numbers
of colourful albarelli containing drugs and ointments.
Among the places famous for their majolica potteries
are: Faenza, Florence, Caffagiolo, Urbino, Castel
Durante, Gubbio, Savona, Siena, Deruta and Venice,
all of which are in the northern half of Italy, but
there were many less-important centres in both north
and south. The subject of majolica is a very wide
one; much study has been given to it and many books
written about it during the past hundred years. Only
rarely are fine specimens to be obtained and, understandably,
when they are, they command high prices.
Italian majolica was exported to all the countries
of Europe, and greatly affected the wares they made.
In some instances, Italian potters were induced to
settle abroad and teach local men how to improve
their work. This occurred at Antwerp, in particular,
and with the invasion of Flanders by the Spaniards
in the late sixteenth century the potters fled northwards
to Holland.
next continental pottery page...
Hispano-Moresque
Ware
There, they produced an earthenware decorated brilliantly
in a copper-coloured lustre, known as Hispano-Moresque
ware. With the reconquest of Spain and the expelling
of the Moors, the making of this and other pottery
was continued by the Spaniards themselves.
|