A FAENZA MAIOLICA ARMORIAL TONDINO
A FAENZA MAIOLICA ARMORIAL TONDINO
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A FAENZA MAIOLICA ARMORIAL TONDINO

CIRCA 1520-1525

细节
A FAENZA MAIOLICA ARMORIAL TONDINO
CIRCA 1520-1525
The center painted with a shield of arms flanked by the initials A and G and surmounted by an black galero with twelve tassels, the well with stylized ochre foliate husks between bands of meandering foliage, the blue-ground border reserved with grotesques, the reverse with concentric yellow bands with ochre lines and a blue band border
10 3⁄8 in. (26.5 cm.) diameter
来源
Baron Alphonse de Rothschild (1827-1905).
Baron Édouard de Rothschild (1868-1949).
Confiscated from the above by the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg following the Nazi occupation of France in May 1940 (ERR no. R 4050).
Recovered by the Monuments Fine Arts and Archives Section from the Altaussee salt mines, Austria, and transferred to the Munich Central Collecting Point, 23 June 1945 (MCCP no. 348/8).
Returned to France on 9 January 1946 and restituted to the Rothschild family.
By descent to the present owners.
出版
Collections de M. le baron Alphonse de Rothschild, circa 1900 (n.d.), Vol. I.

拍品专文

The identity of the patron or recipient of this tondino is currently unidentified, but the arms are probably for the Altacleri family of Verona. The black galero flanked by six tassels on each side probably denotes that he was a Protonotary Apostolic, an Auditor of the Rota or he may have been a bishop(1).

Another tondino bearing the same arms and a similar border was formerly in the Fernand Adda collection(2), and another is in the Louvre(3), suggesting that the three dishes may once have formed part of an armorial set. A further dish, with what appears to be the same arms, but with different coloring, is also in the Musée du Louvre(4). This dish is dated 1536, but the grotesques on the border are different, the arms lack the Cardinal’s galero and the shield is flanked by M. G. If the arms are related, then the recipient must have been a different member of the family.


1. See Dora Thornton and Timothy Wilson, Italian Renaissance Ceramics, A Catalogue of the British Museum Collection, London, 2009, Vol. I, p. 318 for a plate with the black galero and six tassels, and where the authors note that there ‘is some uncertainty about the rights of senior prelates at this period to use various types and colors of prelatial hat’.
2. See Bernard Rackham, Islamic Pottery and Italian Maiolica, Illustrated Catalogue of a Private Collection, London, 1959, no. 283. It was subsequently sold by Palais Galliera, Rheims and Rheims, Paris, 29 November - 3 December 1965, lot 543.
3. Jeanne Giacomotti, Les majoliques des Musées nationaux, Paris, 1974, p. 83, no. 330.
4. Jeanne Giacomotti, ibid., Paris, 1974, pp. 76-77, no. 300.

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