A BLUE AND WHITE IZNIK POTTERY TILE
A BLUE AND WHITE IZNIK POTTERY TILE

OTTOMAN TURKEY, CIRCA 1530

Details
A BLUE AND WHITE IZNIK POTTERY TILE
OTTOMAN TURKEY, CIRCA 1530
Of hexagonal form, the surface painted in cobalt-blue and turquoise on white ground with a stellar motif containing a central rosette issuing fleshy palmettes and smaller flowerheads on white ground, the star outlined in cobalt-blue and surrounded by white clouds reserved against cobalt-blue ground, chips to glaze, intact
10¼in. (16cm.) at widest
Provenance
Anon Sale, Sotheby's, London, 11th February 1964, lot 14

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Andrew Butler-Wheelhouse
Andrew Butler-Wheelhouse

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Lot Essay

A tile of identical design is published in Arthur Lane, A Guide to the Collection of Tiles, London, 1960, pl.13g). In his description of that tile, Lane writes that the design is so neatly mapped out that it suggests the use of stencils (Lane, op.cit., p.19). Venetia Porter mentions that the earliest blue-and-white tiles still in situ are found at the tomb of Sehzade Mahmud (1506-07) and the tomb of Sehzade Ahmad (1512-13), both in Bursa, and at the mosque of Çoban Mustafa Pasa in Gebze (circa 1529). Further 'Damascus' palette tiles are in the Yeni Kaplica baths in Bursa, restored by Süleyman the Magnificent's vizier, Rüstem Pasa (d. 1561). An important group is also in the Ibrahim Pasa mosque in Istanbul, built in 1550 (Venetia Porter, Islamic Tiles, London, 1995, p.104).

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