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An Urbino wet drug jar attributed to the Fontana workshop, circa 1565-70 image 1
An Urbino wet drug jar attributed to the Fontana workshop, circa 1565-70 image 2
Lot 97

An Urbino wet drug jar attributed to the Fontana workshop, circa 1565-70

2 July 2019, 14:00 BST
London, New Bond Street

£8,000 - £12,000

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An Urbino wet drug jar attributed to the Fontana workshop, circa 1565-70

With a serpent handle over a grotesque mask, decorated with two putti holding up a label reading SY.IVIVBINI, above a seated crowned woman holding a sceptre flanked by trees, in a mountainous landscape with rocks and buildings, 23cm high (spout re-stuck)

Footnotes

This vessel is part of a series that is now believed to have been made in the workshop of Orazio Fontana for the apothecary of the Santuario di Loreto. A large part of the apothecary is in the Museo del Palazzo Apostolico di Loreto.

Two vases of this type without the inscription of the contents, one in the Victoria and Albert museum (inv.no.8969&A-1863) and one formerly in the Spitzer collection, are instead inscribed 'Fatto in Urbino' (made in Urbino). In T. Wilson/E. Sani, Le maioliche rinascimentali nelle collezioni della Fondazione Casse di Risparmio di Perugia, (2006), cat.no 55, the authors point out that the series can be attributed to the Fontana workshop based on stylistic comparison with a vase in the British Museum and a vase sold at auction in London in 1950, both inscribed 'FATE.IN.BOTEGA.DE.ORATIO.FONTANA' and 'FATTO IN URBINO IN BOTEGA DI ORATIO FONTANA', pp.166-170. It is plausible that the seated figure represents the city of Florence, though this theory cannot be proven. The decorative scheme recurs on a later series made in Pesaro or Castel Durante around 1574-75, where the crowned figure is sitting beneath a canopy. Both types are illustrated next to one-another in Rudolf E A Drey, Apothecary Jars (1978), plates 24a and 24b.

A further albarello is in the Fitzwilliam Museum, illustrated in Julia Poole, Italian maiolica and incised slipware in the Fitzwilliam Museum (1995), no.411. She notes that there are some forty known pharmacy vessels, albarelli and ewers, most of which she lists, p.377. There are two further albarelli in the Metropolitan Museum, New York (inv. nos.1975.1.995 and 1975.1.996). A pair of similar wet drug jars was sold at Christie's Paris, Collection d'un amateur, 15 May 2003, lot 535, and a double-handled pharmacy jar at Christie's London, 2 November 2016, lot 199.

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