AN URBINO MAIOLICA DOCUMENTARY ISTORIATO EWER
AN URBINO MAIOLICA DOCUMENTARY ISTORIATO EWER
AN URBINO MAIOLICA DOCUMENTARY ISTORIATO EWER
4 More
AN URBINO MAIOLICA DOCUMENTARY ISTORIATO EWER
7 More
AN URBINO MAIOLICA DOCUMENTARY ISTORIATO EWER

DATED 1535, BY FRANCESCO XANTO AVELLI

Details
AN URBINO MAIOLICA DOCUMENTARY ISTORIATO EWER
DATED 1535, BY FRANCESCO XANTO AVELLI
Painted with Apollo and the Muses by the Castalian Spring on Mount Parnassus, with Apollo seated and playing a lira da braccio before distant mountains, the flaring neck with winged putti and clouds, the blue-ground socle foot reserved with foliage, the black handle inscribed with the date ·M· / ·D·X / XXV and I [N] / V / RB / I / N / O and terminating with a tablet inscribed ·F·X·R· in black, the underside with various labels including a printed Baron Alphonse de Rothschild collection label (with a coronet), a label printed with 'P. 48 / E. de R./ 133' for Édouard de Rothschild, a label inscribed R 4094 and an Union Centrale exhibition
10 7⁄8 in. (27.7 cm.) high
Provenance
Count Ferdinando Pasolini Dall’Onda, Faenza, Count Benvenuto Pasolini Dall’Onda.
Baron Alphonse de Rothschild (1827-1905).
Baron Édouard de Rothschild (1868-1949).
Confiscated from the above by the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg following the Nazi occupation of France in May 1940 (ERR no. R 4094).
Recovered by the Monuments Fine Arts and Archives Section from the Altaussee salt mines, Austria, and transferred to the Munich Central Collecting Point, 23 June 1945 (MCCP no. 390/7).
Returned to France on 9 January 1946 and restituted to the Rothschild family.
By descent to the present owners.
Literature
Luigi Frati, Del Museo Pasolini in Faenza, Descrizione, Bologna, 1852, no. 70. Catalogue des objets d’art et de curiosité exposés au Musée Rétrospectif ouvert au Palais de l’Industrie en 1865, Paris, 1866, p. 252, no. 2772.
Collections de M. le baron Alphonse de Rothschild, circa 1900 (n.d.), Vol. I.
Exhibited
Paris, Palais de l’Industrie, Union Centrale des Beaux-Arts Appliqués à l’Industrie, Musée Rétrospectif, 1865, no. 2772.

Lot Essay

It would appear that the present unpublished ewer is not only a new addition to the corpus of Xanto’s work, but it is also unique, as there are no other ewers painted by him which are known to have survived. No ewers can be found in the compendium by E.P. Sani, ‘List of works by or attributable to Francesco Xanto Avelli’ in J.V.G. Mallet, Xanto, Pottery Painter, Poet, Man of the Renaissance, Wallace Collection January-April 2007 Exhibition Catalogue, London, 2007, pp. 191-201.

The scene is taken from Marcantonio Raimondi’s engraving Parnassus, after a design by Raphael for a fresco in the Stanza della Segnatura in the Vatican, a source which Xanto turned to many times for inspiration. On this ewer, Xanto has adapted the print by reversing it and modifying some of the details, including changing Apollo’s original lyre to a lira da braccio. The scene is painted slightly more loosely than is typical, with little use of line, which may be related to the challenges of the curved surface. The form of the ewer is similar to a Roman ewer engraved by Agostino Veneziano in 1531. For an ewer of the same form decorated by a different painter and dated 1539, see Timothy Wilson, Tin-Glaze and Image Culture, the MAK Maiolica Collection in its wider context, The MAK, Vienna, April – August Exhibition Catalogue, Stuttgart, 2022, pp. 32-33.

More from Rothschild Masterpieces: The Kunstkammer

View All
View All