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Islamic Dish with a Sailing Ship Design in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, August 2019


Dish with Sailing-Ship Design,17th century
Object Details
Object Name: Dish
Date: 17th century
Geography: Made in Turkey, Iznik
Medium: Stonepaste; polychrome painted under transparent glaze
Dimensions: H. 1 5/8 in.(4.1 cm)
Diam. of rim: 9 1/2 in. (24.1 cm)
Classification: Ceramics
Credit Line: Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1966
Accession Number: 66.4.4
This dish comes from the major ceramics production center of Iznik, which rose to prominence in the sixteenth century and was known for its distinctive saz-style floral ornament. In the seventeenth century, there developed a new decorative repertory of figures, animals, ships, and buildings, including pagoda-like pavilions and domed churches. These field designs are found on numerous examples. The characteristic border of these pieces, ultimately derived from Chinese wave motifs, has become a pattern of alternating leaves and spirals.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/451835
Object Details
Object Name: Dish
Date: 17th century
Geography: Made in Turkey, Iznik
Medium: Stonepaste; polychrome painted under transparent glaze
Dimensions: H. 1 5/8 in.(4.1 cm)
Diam. of rim: 9 1/2 in. (24.1 cm)
Classification: Ceramics
Credit Line: Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1966
Accession Number: 66.4.4
This dish comes from the major ceramics production center of Iznik, which rose to prominence in the sixteenth century and was known for its distinctive saz-style floral ornament. In the seventeenth century, there developed a new decorative repertory of figures, animals, ships, and buildings, including pagoda-like pavilions and domed churches. These field designs are found on numerous examples. The characteristic border of these pieces, ultimately derived from Chinese wave motifs, has become a pattern of alternating leaves and spirals.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/451835
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