AN ITALIAN MAIOLICA ISTORIATO TWO-HANDLED PILGRIM-FLASK AND COVER
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AN ITALIAN MAIOLICA ISTORIATO TWO-HANDLED PILGRIM-FLASK AND COVER

MID-16TH CENTURY, URBINO OR PESARO, ATTRIBUTED TO SFORZA DI MARCANTONIO

Details
AN ITALIAN MAIOLICA ISTORIATO TWO-HANDLED PILGRIM-FLASK AND COVER
MID-16TH CENTURY, URBINO OR PESARO, ATTRIBUTED TO SFORZA DI MARCANTONIO
Of flattened tear-drop form with looped branch handles, one side painted with the story of Philyara and Saturn, the other with Vulcan, Venus and Cupid in a wooded mountainous landscape, on a domed oval foot, the screw-cover with an urn-shaped finial (chipping to finial, body with extensive cracks and old over-painting, overpainting to rim and neck, chipping to footrim)
14 1/8 in. (36 cm.) high
Special Notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

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Monica Turcich
Monica Turcich

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Lot Essay

The present flask illustrates two scenes from classical mythology, the first of which is taken from Hygenus, Fabularum Liber, published in Basel in 1535, depicting Saturn transformed into the guise of a horse to ravish the Oceanid Philyra between figures of Cupid. Saturn is depicted before his transformation with his attribute of a scythe at his feet and a female figure to the right, which may represent Philyra at another stage of the story, or Rhea who discovered the illcit affair. The figures on the reverse show Vulcan forging Cupid's arrows before Venus.

See Wendy M. Watson, Italian Renaissance Maiolica from the William A. Clark Collection (London, 1986), pp. 168-169, cat. no. 67 for a plate attributed to Sforza di Marcantonio and dated 1551. The depiction of the naked Philyra is taken from a print by Marcantonio Raimondi from the I Modi after Giulio Romano, which was used repeatedly by Xanto as a source of inspiration, and the author also discusses a possible connection between Sforza di Marcantonio and Xanto. For another similar plate also attributed to Sforza di Marcantonio see Christina Garbangna, ed., Il secolo d'oro della maiolica, Ceramica italiana dei secoli XV-XVI, della raccolta del Museo Statale dell'Ermitage (Milan, 2003), p. 126, no. 115. A documentary pilgrim-flask painted by Sforza was sold in these Rooms on 18 December 2006, lot 23.

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