Unknown North African, Middle Eastern, and Near Eastern
Tondino

CultureTurkish
Titles
  • Tondino
DateFirst half of 16th century
MediumStonepaste; painted in blue under transparent glaze
Dimensions2 × 10 1/8 × 10 in. (5.1 × 25.7 × 25.4 cm)
Credit LineMuseum purchase funded by His Highness the Aga Khan Shia Ismaili Community of Houston, The Levant Foundation, Mr. and Mrs. Akbar Ladjevardian, The Francis L. Lederer Foundation, courtesy of Sharon Lederer; Marathon Oil Company, Mr. and Mrs. Omar Rehmatulla, Strategic Real Estate Advisors, London, Monsour Taghdisi, His Excellency Sheikh Sultan bin Suhaim Al Thani, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, the 2007 Art of the Islamic Worlds Gala, the Brown Foundation Accessions Endowment Fund, and the Alice Pratt Brown Museum Fund
Object number2007.1304
Current Location
The Caroline Wiess Law Building
113 Islamic Art Gallery
On view

Explore Further

Object Type
Description

In the late 15th century, the Turkish city of Iznik, south of Istanbul, became the center of production for one of the most distinctive types of ceramics in the Islamic world. Early Iznik wares, inspired by Chinese blue-and-white porcelain and celadon wares, employed blue as their primary color and reproduced motifs that were often drawn from a Far Eastern visual repertoire while also testing new decorative formulas.


This tondino—a type of plate with a broad, flat rim and small, bowl-shaped center—is a superb example of Iznik production of the first half of the 16th century. The style of decoration, dominated by leafy spirals, is generally called “Golden Horn,” a reference to numerous fragments with comparable motifs found on the southern shore of the Golden Horn, an inlet dividing Istanbul. By the mid-16th century, green, turquoise, purple, and a thick, vibrant red paint known as bolus armenus were incorporated to the palette of Iznik wares, along with new decorative motifs dominated by floral bouquets.


ProvenancePrivate collection, Europe; [Oliver Hoare Limited, London, 2007]; purchased by MFAH, 2007.

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

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