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Maiolica in the Renaissance

Maiolica, the refined, white-glazed pottery of the Italian Renaissance, was adapted to all objects that were traditionally ceramic, such as dishes, bowls, serving vessels, and jugs of all shapes and sizes. It was also used as a medium for sculpture and sculptural reliefs, as well as floor and ceiling tiles.
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Bowl with a Horseman Spearing a Serpent, Tin-glazed earthenware, Spanish
Spanish
late 1300s or early 1400s
Apothecary jar (orciuolo), Giunta di Tugio, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware)
Giunta di Tugio
probably 1431
Prudence, Andrea della Robbia  Italian, Glazed terracotta, Italian, Florence
Andrea della Robbia
ca. 1475
Bowl with The Virgin and the Unicorn and arms of Matthias Corvinus and Beatrice of Aragon, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), Italian, Pesaro
Italian, Pesaro
probably ca. 1486–88
Sculptural group with The Lamentation Over the Dead Christ, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), Eastern Central Italian, Emilia-Romagna or the Marche
Eastern Central Italian, Emilia-Romagna or the Marche
1487
Storage jar (albarello) with a profile portrait, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), Italian, probably Naples or Naples district
Italian, probably Naples or Naples district
ca. 1480–1500
Bowl with the Arms of Pope Julius II and the Manzoli of Bologna surrounded by putti, cornucopiae, satyrs, dolphins, birds, etc., workshop of Giovanni Maria Vasaro, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), Italian, Castel Durante
workshop of Giovanni Maria Vasaro
1508
Roundel (tondo), workshop of Giovanni Maria Vasaro, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), Italian, Castel Durante
workshop of Giovanni Maria Vasaro
ca. 1510–20
Albarello, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), Italian, Siena
Italian, Siena
1515
Dish with the Incredulity of St. Thomas, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), lustered, Italian, Deruta
Italian, Deruta
ca. 1520
Ewer, Maestro Giorgio Andreoli  Italian, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), lustered, Italian, Gubbio
Maestro Giorgio Andreoli
ca. 1520–25
Shallow bowl with Ruggiero, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), Italian, possibly Urbino
Italian, possibly Urbino
ca. 1525
Armorial Plate (tondino): The story of King Midas, Nicola da Urbino  Italian, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware)
Nicola da Urbino
ca. 1520–25
Armorial dish: Supper at the House of Simon the Pharisee, Maestro Giorgio Andreoli  Italian, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware)
Maestro Giorgio Andreoli
1528
Dish (coppa amatoria), "In Castel Durante" Painter  Italian, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), Italian, Castel Durante
"In Castel Durante" Painter
ca. 1530
Dish (tondino), Italian , Gubbio, early 16th century, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), Italian, Gubbio
Italian
ca. 1530
Broth bowl and cover (scodella and tagliere) from an accouchement set; Aeneas leaving Troy with his father and son (inside bowl); Pyramis and Thisbe (on cover), Baldassare Manara  Italian, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware)
Baldassare Manara
ca. 1530–40
Plate (piatto): The story of Aeneas, Francesco Xanto Avelli da Rovigo  Italian, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware)
Francesco Xanto Avelli da Rovigo
1532
Wine cooler with A Pageant Battle with Elephants, Fontana family  Italian, Maiolica (tin-glazed earthenware), Italian, Urbino
Fontana family
ca. 1562–75

Maiolica, the refined, white-glazed pottery of the Italian Renaissance, was adapted to all objects that were traditionally ceramic, such as dishes, bowls, serving vessels, and jugs of all shapes and sizes. It was also used as a medium for sculpture and sculptural reliefs, as well as floor and ceiling tiles. The latter were rectangular, laid side by side across specially adapted joists.

Maiolica is distinguished by its white, opaque glaze, due to the presence of tin oxide, a powdery white ash. Tin was an expensive imported substance, which made maiolica a far more expensive commodity than ordinary pottery. Great care was taken to refine and shape the local clays, which varied considerably in color and weight. A maiolica workshop would have consisted of about eight workers, each with a special task—gathering fuel, preparing and firing the kilns, preparing the raw clay, throwing or molding it into shapes, mixing and applying the glaze, and decorating it with ceramic pigments. All worked under the leadership of a master potter, who in most cases would have owned the workshop.

The tin-glazed surface was smooth and shiny but not brilliant. In an evolution similar to that which led from fresco and tempera painting to oil painting, in the sixteenth century maiolica workshop procedures applied a second, clear glaze to maiolica objects, which produced a brilliantly shiny surface and enhanced the color decoration. The tin glaze itself was a mixture of the elements of ordinary lead glaze and tin oxide. This was liquefied with water and (most likely) a little gum arabic, into which the clay objects were dipped. When thoroughly dry, the surface was ready to be painted, a difficult process requiring great control by the painter, as the surface in its pre-fired condition readily absorbed the pigments, themselves dry powdery metal oxides mixed with a little water and perhaps gum arabic.

Around 1430–60, the range of colors available for decorating maiolica expanded from purple-brown derived from manganese and green from copper, to blue from cobalt. By the early sixteenth century, a full range of colors was available: blues, greens, yellows, oranges, white, black, and brown, and several tones of luster colors such as ruby red, pink, yellow, and reddish brown. Judging by surviving examples, the luster colors were the specialty of several workshops in Deruta and of Maestro Giorgio and his descendants in Gubbio.

Florence led the way in the fifteenth century in the production of maiolica. The output of the city’s workshops represented a technical and aesthetic advance on the process as it was learned from Islamic Spain (it is not known who introduced the technique into Italy). Before the turn of the sixteenth century, important centers in Naples, Pesaro, Faenza, Rome, and Deruta were making fine maiolicas. From the sixteenth century, surviving examples of great beauty were made in Forlì, Cafaggiolo, Castel Durante, Rome, Urbino, and Venice, as well as several places in Sicily. For important commissions, sources of design were either new drawings incorporating the arms and insignia of the client for one-of-a-kind pieces, or prints and other available drawings that were often repeated in an early form of mass production for a larger popular market.

Maiolica had a last flowering at Urbino in the last third of the sixteenth century. But by the end of the century, production had declined due to economic constraints, although the so-called bianchi di Faenza, lightly decorated white wares made in Faenza, continued the tradition of new designs and fine workmanship.


Contributors

Jessie McNab
Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2002


Citation

View Citations

McNab, Jessie. “Maiolica in the Renaissance.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/maio/hd_maio.htm (October 2002)