Getting started with the collection:
No image available
Italian maiolica and Europe: medieval, Renaissance, and later Italian pottery in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, with some examples illustrating the spread of tin-glazed pottery across Europe
By
Abstract
This book is the culmination of nearly thirty years' work in caring for, studying, and developing the collections in this Museum by Timothy Wilson, long-time Keeper of Western Art. Wilson is well-known as a specialist in the study of European Renaissance ceramics. The Ashmolean collections have their origins in the collection of C.D.E. Fortnum (1820-1899), but have been developed further in the last quarter-century, so that they can claim to be one of the top such collections of Renaissance ceramics worldwide. This book, containing 289 catalogue entries, will completely encompass the Museum's collection of postclassical Italian pottery, including pieces from excavations. In addition it will include catalogue entries for some seventy selected pieces of pottery from France, the Low Countries, England, Spain, Portugal, Germany, and Mexico, in order to present a wide-ranging picture of the development of tin-glaze pottery from Islamic Spain through to recent times. It will also include an essay by Kelly Domoney of Cranfield University, and Elisabeth Gardner of the Ashmolean's Conservation Department, on the technical analysis and conservation history of some pieces in the collection.
Contributors
Publisher
Publication
Oxford: Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology, University of Oxford, 2017
Year
Is about
Person
Subject
Type
Language
Classification
ISBN
- 9781910807163
- 1910807168
Persistent URL
To refer to this object, please use the following persistent URL: