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Palissy is known as a potter for such oval dishes transformed into tiny ponds, complete with vegetation, fish, and creatures from the water's edge. To make his ceramic ponds as lifelike as possible, he made molds from actual shells, frogs, lizards, fish, and other creatures to create life-like models. He developed new techniques for more subtle tones and life-like coloring. The ingenuity of these imitations of nature was greatly appreciated in court circles; one of his patrons was the French queen, Catherine de Medici. The popularity of his works extended long after his death, as seen in the work of 17th-century imitators, such as the unidentified ceramicist responsible for the present piece. In Palissy's desire to find better clays for pottery and invent more vibrant glazes, he began digging in the earth, which led him to the study of nature's "secrets" concerning minerals, the flow of water, and fossils, about which he made important discoveries.Palissy had many imitators after his death. The creatures on this platter do not have have the crispness of Palissy's indubitably original work and is likely by an imitator from the 1600s.
Page data
- Page
- 6
- Source index
- 0
- Type
- photo
- Media ID
- ceb873c699fe09b1
- Size
- unknown
Document data
- ID
- 12224
- Core
- obj
- Type
- object
DTO data
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"contentType": "object",
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"title": "Ornamental Platter with Pond Life",
"description": "Palissy is known as a potter for such oval dishes transformed into tiny ponds, complete with vegetation, fish, and creatures from the water's edge. To make his ceramic ponds as lifelike as possible, he made molds from actual shells, frogs, lizards, fish, and other creatures to create life-like models. He developed new techniques for more subtle tones and life-like coloring. The ingenuity of these imitations of nature was greatly appreciated in court circles; one of his patrons was the French queen, Catherine de Medici. The popularity of his works extended long after his death, as seen in the work of 17th-century imitators, such as the unidentified ceramicist responsible for the present piece. In Palissy's desire to find better clays for pottery and invent more vibrant glazes, he began digging in the earth, which led him to the study of nature's \"secrets\" concerning minerals, the flow of water, and fossils, about which he made important discoveries.Palissy had many imitators after his death. The creatures on this platter do not have have the crispness of Palissy's indubitably original work and is likely by an imitator from the 1600s.",
"provenance": "Dean Garnier [label on back]; William Boare [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; Sale November 1, 1879; Jacques Seligmann, Paris [date of acquisition unknown], by purchase; Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1911, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.",
"date": "c. 1630 (Late Renaissance)",
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Context sent to Scholar
Document identity
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Document source metadata
{
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"contentType": "object",
"stage": "normalized",
"title": "Ornamental Platter with Pond Life",
"description": "Palissy is known as a potter for such oval dishes transformed into tiny ponds, complete with vegetation, fish, and creatures from the water's edge. To make his ceramic ponds as lifelike as possible, he made molds from actual shells, frogs, lizards, fish, and other creatures to create life-like models. He developed new techniques for more subtle tones and life-like coloring. The ingenuity of these imitations of nature was greatly appreciated in court circles; one of his patrons was the French queen, Catherine de Medici. The popularity of his works extended long after his death, as seen in the work of 17th-century imitators, such as the unidentified ceramicist responsible for the present piece. In Palissy's desire to find better clays for pottery and invent more vibrant glazes, he began digging in the earth, which led him to the study of nature's \"secrets\" concerning minerals, the flow of water, and fossils, about which he made important discoveries.Palissy had many imitators after his death. The creatures on this platter do not have have the crispness of Palissy's indubitably original work and is likely by an imitator from the 1600s.",
"provenance": "Dean Garnier [label on back]; William Boare [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; Sale November 1, 1879; Jacques Seligmann, Paris [date of acquisition unknown], by purchase; Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1911, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.",
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Document source extras
{
"med": "earthenware with lead glaze",
"creator_ids": [
"15518"
],
"collection_ids": [
"REN"
],
"exhibition_ids": [
"1994",
"3702"
]
}
Page context
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