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28 mars 2025

Dish, Medici Porcelain Manufactory, ca. 1575–87

Dish, Medici Porcelain Manufactory, ca. 1575–87
Dish, Medici Porcelain Manufactory, ca. 1575–87
Dish, Medici Porcelain Manufactory, ca. 1575–87
Dish, Medici Porcelain Manufactory, ca. 1575–87
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Dish, Manufactory Medici Porcelain Manufactory, Italian, ca. 1575–87. Soft-paste porcelain decorated in underglaze blue, 4.1 × 29.2 cm. Gift of Mrs. Joseph V. McMullen, and Fletcher Fund, 1946. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 46.114.

 

The porcelain made at the Medici workshops in Florence was the first to be produced in Europe. Francesco I de’Medici (1541–1587) established a ceramic workshop in the 1560s with the intention of imitation Chinese blue-and-white porcelain. It took approximately ten years of experimentation before the workshop could manufacture the type of porcelain known as soft-paste. While so-called Medici porcelain lacks the ingredients that comprise hard-paste porcelain as made by the Chinese the Medici potters were able to craft a fine white ceramic body with cobalt decoration that represented an outstanding technical achievement for its time. Technically difficult and expensive to make, Medici porcelain was produced in very small quantities, and manufacture is believed to have ceased, or at least significantly diminished with the death of Francesco in 1587. Only fifty-nine pieces of Medici porcelain are known to have survive, of which one-tenth reside in the Museum's collection.

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