Plate with Arms of the Vitelleschi Family
1527
Maestro Giorgio Andreoli
Maestro Giorgio Andreoli (Italian, 1465?–1553)
Decorative Art and Design
Plate with Arms of the Vitelleschi Family, 1527. Circle of Maestro Giorgio Andreoli (Italian, 1465?–1553). Tin-glazed earthenware with gold luster (maiolica); diameter: 26.3 cm (10 3/8 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund 1950.155 Italian nobles of the 1500s often expressed their wealth, social status, and sophistication by ordering large sets of maiolica that sometimes carried their coats of arms or even likenesses, usually in profile as in portraits of the period. Reserved for use at festival events such as a wedding or commissioned to mark a special occasion or an important visit, elaborately decorated utilitarian vessels in maiolica were prized as works of art by their owners and displayed as such in their residences. Today, the Palazzo Vitelleschi, home of the Vitelleschi family in Tarquinia, a coastal town north of Rome, is an archaeological museum.
- Maker/Artist
- Maestro Giorgio Andreoli
- Classification
- Ceramic
- Formatted Medium
- tin-glazed earthenware with gold luster (maiolica)
- Medium
- tin-glazed, earthenware, gold, luster, maiolica
- Dimensions
- Diameter: 26.3 cm (10 3/8 in.)
- Inscribed
- Inscription: signed: M. G da Agubio, 1527.
- Departments
- Decorative Art and Design
- Accession Number
- 1950.155
- Credit Line
- Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund
- Exhibitions
- No existing exhibition history
- Rights Statement
- CC0
- Museum Location
- 118 Italian Renaissance
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