Bowl with luster decoration, Spain, Málaga
second quarter of the 15th century,
earthenware with underglaze colors and overglaze luster,
© Victoria and Albert Museum, London
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~Artistic Exchange
Until the sixteenth century, the Middle East sat firmly
at the center of the known world, and its connections with
East and South Asia, Europe, and Africa made it the hub of
a complex system of trade routes. One result of this far-reaching
commercial traffic was that Middle Eastern artists and craftsmen
had to compete with the best artisans in the world. Chinese
ceramics especially spurred creativity. White Chinese porcelain
had been imported into Iraq as early as the eighth century
and was much in demand by the elite, which inspired Islamic
potters to create imitations made of local materials for
clients of more modest means. In the process, local potters
invented a type of white pottery that could serve as a "blank
canvas" for new types of decoration. One new method involved
the use of metallic compounds, which, after firing, left
gleaming designs in luster on the surface of the glaze.
Luster pottery proved popular over a long period. The large
bowl depicting a ship bearing the arms of Portugal shows
that lusterwares were still being produced by Muslim craftsmen
in Spain in the late fifteenth century. The main center of
manufacture was the southern port of Málaga, which remained
under Muslim rule until 1487. Luster production continued
in Christian-ruled Spain for many centuries, and from there
it traveled to Italy, where artists used Islamic techniques
to create wares in the Renaissance style.
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