European Decorative Arts and Sculpture Dish with Grotesques and Putti Made in Delft, Netherlands, Europe1650-75 Artist/maker unknown, Dutch Tin-glazed earthenware with blue decoration Currently not on view 1936-18-4 Gift of Mrs. Edward Bok, 1936 |
LabelIn the early seventeenth century Delft pottery began to be influenced by imports of Chinese blue-and-white porcelain of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) transported by the Dutch East India Company. Delft potters ceased to emulate the once-popular, multicolored Italian maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware that is often richly decorated) and adapted their colors to the new fashion. Decorative motifs, like the putti (figures of infant boys) and grotesques (interlaced garlands and fantastic human and animal figures) on this example, however, continued to recall Italian Renaissance models. |














