AN IZNIK POTTERY DISH
VARIOUS PROPERTIES
AN IZNIK POTTERY DISH

OTTOMAN TURKEY, CIRCA 1600

Details
AN IZNIK POTTERY DISH
OTTOMAN TURKEY, CIRCA 1600
On short foot with sloping rim, the white ground painted in cobalt-blue, emerald-green and bole-red with a central roundel containing a pair of addorsed lions divided by a bird, another lion and a hare below on green ground surrounded by ring of palmettes, the rim with a register of interlocking palmettes, the exterior with alternating floral shapes in green and blue, repaired clean break
12¼in. (31cm.) diam.

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Andrew Butler-Wheelhouse
Andrew Butler-Wheelhouse

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Lot Essay

There are three Iznik dishes attributed to the late 16th Century in the Ashmolean Museum, the David Collection and in the Gulbenkian Collection which also have depictions of the fluid and playful animals found on our dish,(Nurhan Atasoy and Julian Raby, Iznik: The Pottery of Ottoman Turkey, London, 1989., pls.546 and 548, p.257; Maria Queiroz Ribeiro, Iznik Pottery, Lisbon, 1996, no.87, pp.246-47). Looking at the group as a whole, one cannot help but wonder whether the majority of the group were done by the same inventive artist, with the slight differences accounted for by a development in his style over time. The small number of surviving vessels is such that it is certainly possible that it is the work of a single man.
An Iznik Dish previously in the Vincent Bulent Collection with almost the exact same depiction of the three larger animals found on our dish was sold in these Rooms, 26 April 2005, lot 67.

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