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14th to 18th Century European Earthenware and Stoneware

Collection Info
14th to 18th Century European Earthenware and Stoneware

The Gardiner Museum’s holdings highlight important developments in the history of European earthenware from the fourteenth to the eighteenth centuries, including tin-glazed earthenware, English slipware and creamware. Earthenware is the term given to ceramics that have been fired at a comparatively low temperature and have not vitrified. They have opaque bodies and are often glazed to make them impervious to liquids. Different types of earthenwares are given specific names that distinguish their bodies, glazes and decoration.

An important area of focus is tin-glazed earthenware produced in Italy, France and England, where it was known as maiolica, faïence and delftware respectively. Tin-glazed earthenware first appeared in the ninth century in present day Iraq, and involved the addition of ashes of tin to a lead glaze to create an opaque white surface for decoration in emulation of Chinese porcelain. Throughout the next five centuries, knowledge of tin-glazing spread throughout the Middle East and the Mediterranean. The movement of objects and people further prompted its dissemination to Italy, and Northern Europe.

European Earthenware Collections:

English Delftware

English Slipware

Creamware

French Faience

Italian Maiolica

Other European Earthenware and Stoneware

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Dish with Jupiter and Venus
Artist / Maker: Apollo Basin Painter
1532
Object number: G83.1.326
Moulded trefoil footed dish
c.1535
Object number: G83.1.327
Plate with scene from the story of Icarus
Artist / Maker: Franco Xanto Avelli
c.1525-27
Object number: G83.1.333
Dish with scene from the story of Icarus
Artist / Maker: Franco Xanto Avelli
c.1530
Object number: G83.1.362
Plate with scene from the story of Metabus and Camilla
Artist / Maker: Franco Xanto Avelli
1534
Object number: G83.1.363
Dish with scene of Tideo and Polynice
Artist / Maker: Maestro Giorgio Andreoli
1539
Object number: G83.1.364
Plate with story of Leto and the Lycians
Artist / Maker: Milan Marsyas Painter
c.1530
Object number: G83.1.385
Broad-rimmed dish (Tondino) with a coat-of-arms
Artist / Maker: Milan Marsyas Painter
c.1530-1535
Object number: G83.1.386
Plate with scenes from the story of Leda and the swan
Artist / Maker: Franco Xanto Avelli
c.1530
Object number: G83.1.387
Tondino with Leda and the Swan and the Arms of Medici Impaling Pucci
Artist / Maker: Orazio Fontana
c.1531-1544
Object number: G83.1.388
Dish with scene of the Fall of Troy
Artist / Maker: Guido Durantino
1535
Object number: G83.1.389
Dish with Laocoön and his Sons
Artist / Maker: Associate of Franco Xanto Avelli
c.1530
Object number: G83.1.390
Dish with scene of Aeneas feasting
1536
Object number: G83.1.391
Plaque: Christ Crucified
c.1540
Object number: G83.1.392
Footed dish with a mythological scene
Artist / Maker: Coal Mine Painter
1546
Object number: G83.1.395
Dish with scene of the Fiery Furnace
Artist / Maker: Guido Durantino
c.1550
Object number: G83.1.396
Two dishes with mythological scenes
Artist / Maker: Associate of Franco Xanto Avelli
1552
Object number: G83.1.398.1-2
Pair of Stands for Salt
1580-1600
Object number: G83.1.399.1-2
Two-handled fluted shallow bowl with Bacchus
c.1550-1560
Object number: G83.1.400
Plate with scene from the story of Leto and the Lycians
Artist / Maker: Orazio Fontana
c.1560
Object number: G83.1.402
Plate with scene from the second Punic Wars
Artist / Maker: Guido Durantino
c.1540-1560
Object number: G83.1.403
Oval Dish from the Service of  Alfonso II d'Este
Artist / Maker: Patanazzi Workshop
c.1579 or later c.1598-1605
Object number: G83.1.404
Plate with the arms of a Contarini bishop
Artist / Maker: Patanazzi Workshop
c.1597-1610
Object number: G83.1.405
Photographer: Toni Hafkenscheid
Artist / Maker: Castel Durante
c.1540
Object number: G83.1.411