Lot Essay
In her extensive study on Veneto-Saracenic metalwork, Sylvia Auld records a number of salvers (Sylvia Auld, Renaissance Venice, Islam, and Mahmud the Kurd - A Metalworking Enigma, London, 2004, pp.215-245). Amongst those of other forms, Auld describes examples which have a broad rim and gently curving cavetto giving onto a flat base such as ours. She believes this group to have been made in Europe to an 'Islamic' pattern, and for a symbolic function as a form of visible display of wealth. One such example of this form, with an added signature of Mahmud al-Kurdi, is in the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore (Inv.no.54.527, Auld, op.cit., no.5.4, p.221).
Both this dish and that of the following lot were at one point in the collection of Nicolas Landau (1887-1979), one of the greatest antique dealers of the 20th century, affectionately known as the "Prince des antiquaries".
Both this dish and that of the following lot were at one point in the collection of Nicolas Landau (1887-1979), one of the greatest antique dealers of the 20th century, affectionately known as the "Prince des antiquaries".