Italian Ceramics: Catalogue of the J. Paul Getty Museum Collection

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

7


Relief-Blue Jar with


Rampant Lions


Tuscany, probably Florence


ca. 1425-50


Tin-glazed earthenware


H: 39.4 cm (15 Vi in.)


Diam (at lip): 19.3 cm (ysA in.)


W (max.): 40 cm [is^3 A in.)


84.DE.97


MARKS AND INSCRIPTIONS
Below each handle, a six-pointed asterisk.

CONDITION
A crack runs from under one handle to the base;
two small losses in the neck are filled and painted;
small chips around the rim and along the handles.

PROVENANCE
Count Alessandro Contini-Bonacossi (d. 1956),
Villa Vittoria, Florence, sold to N. Longari; [Nella
Longari, Milan, sold to R. Zietz]; [Rainer Zietz,
Ltd., London, sold to the J. Paul Getty Museum,
1984].

EXHIBITIONS
None.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Cora 1973, 1: 83, 457; 2, pi. 1 n} GettyMusf 13
(1985): 240, no. 157; Hess 1988A, no. 7; Conti
et al. 1991, 254, no. 59; Masterpieces 1997, 9,
no. 2; Summary Catalogue 2001, no. 346.

THIS TWO-HANDLED drug jar is the largest known ves­


sel of its kind. Its high-shouldered, ovoid body is embel­


lished on each side with a rampant lion among dots (or


"berries") and branches of leaves in a thin blue impasto

outlined in and surrounded by dashes and wavy lines in


manganese purple. The short neck and strap handles are


likewise painted with blue dots and manganese lines


on a thin bluish white ground. The interior is glazed but


much abraded.


This piece displays a painted asterisk below each

handle, which may serve a purely ornamental function,


since asterisks were a common decorative motif.^1 Be­


cause the areas below handles on jugs and jars are con­


ventionally inscribed with maker's marks, however, it


is also possible that the asterisks on this work indi­


cate a given workshop. Galeazzo Cora identified the six-

pointed asterisk on this drug jar (fig. 7A) as the mark of


the workshop of Giunta di Tugio di Giunta (ca. 1382-ca.


1450), one of the most important maiolica ceramists of

his time in Florence.^2 However, the ascription of all jars


marked with the asterisk to di Tugio is currently under


question.^3 On stylistic grounds, it has been proposed
that the thirty-three relief-blue jars marked with aster­
isks of the total 162 attributed to the Florentine area may,
in fact, be the work of at least seven different artists.^4
Lions frequently embellish zaffeia a rilievo, or relief-
blue ceramics (fig. 7D) and are particularly appropriate
as a Florentine motif since they may refer to that city's
lion emblem, or marzocco. The lion, also a popular

image on wares from Valencian centers such as Paterna
or Manises,^5 is commonly thought to be of Hispano-
Moresque origin. Recent scholarship also suggests that it
may derive from Italian heraldry or archaic ceramics.^6
The white, starlike disk on the lion's chest, a design
whose significance has yet to be explained, appears on
Hispano-Moresque works (fig. 7E) and may have been
transferred to Italian ceramics with the influx of Spanish
wares in the fifteenth century.^7 This design also ap­
pears on animals embellishing contemporary and earlier

7 A Detail of maker's mark below handle.

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