Loading

pilgrim bottle

Orazio Fontanamid 1500s

Spencer Museum of Art

Spencer Museum of Art
Lawrence, United States

Maiolica ceramics are noted for their brilliantly colored surfaces, created by tin oxide glazes. The Spencer’s pilgrim bottle features sky blue, golden yellow, and cornhusk green. The two faces show an episode from the ancient myth of Proserpina, who ate six pomegranate seeds while in the underworld and was thus destined to live there every fall and winter for eternity while her mother Ceres mourned and made the plants wither. On one side, the Roman God of the underworld, Pluto, whisks away a startled Proserpina in his chariot. On the other side, sea nymphs and nude goddesses on nearby cliffs respond with alarm to the abduction. On both sides of the jar we see the frightened Proserpina in the dark underworld entrance, formed by the gaping mouths of horned creatures. The ancients used the myth of Proserpina to explain the seasons, while Orazio Fontana used the subject in a more decorative fashion.

Show lessRead more
  • Title: pilgrim bottle
  • Creator: Orazio Fontana
  • Date Created: mid 1500s
  • Physical Dimensions: Object Height: 42 cm, Object Height: 16 1/2 in
  • Type: containers
  • Medium: maiolica, earthenware, glazing
Spencer Museum of Art

Additional Items

Get the app

Explore museums and play with Art Transfer, Pocket Galleries, Art Selfie, and more

Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites