AN IZNIK POTTERY DISH
AN IZNIK POTTERY DISH
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VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 2… Read more PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF MRS. MONIQUE UZIELLI
AN IZNIK POTTERY DISH

OTTOMAN TURKEY, CIRCA 1570

Details
AN IZNIK POTTERY DISH
OTTOMAN TURKEY, CIRCA 1570
With cusped sloping rim on short foot, the white ground painted in cobalt-blue, green and bole-red in fine black outline with an asymmetrical floral spray composed of tulips, carnations and hyacinths, the top edge of the cavetto with small cloudbands, the rim with stylised wave and rock pattern, the exterior with alternating paired tulips and flowerheads, intact
13¾in. (35cm.) diam.
Special notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 20% on the buyer's premium.

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Lot Essay

The gentle swaying movement of the flowers represented on this dish indicate the influence of more naturalistic designs favoured by Kara Memi, the chief painter at the Ottoman court in the later part of the 16th Century. He favoured floral arrangements which were often described as 'blowing in the wind' for their sense of flow and movement. For a discussion on Kara Memi and his influence on Iznik designs see Nurhan Atasoy and Julian Raby, Iznik: The Pottery of Ottoman Turkey, London, 1989, chapter XIX, p.222-3. A further dish with a similar flowing design, held in the Omer M. Koc collection, also shares a striking rich dark-green glaze, (Hulya Bilgi, Dance of Fire: Iznik tiles and Ceramics in the Sadberk Hanim Museum and Omer M. Koc Collections, Istanbul, 2009, fig. 54, p. 132). From around 1570 onwards this rich dark green was gradually phased out by a lighter emerald-green glaze. The first recorded use of emerald-green with bole-red dates to 1566-7 and is found on tiles on the portico of the tomb of Sultan Suleyman. A very similar dish dated to 1570-75 was sold in these Rooms, 22 April 1981, lot 331, published in Nurhan Atasoy and Julian Raby, op.cit. fig. 398, p.227.

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