Skip to main content
The Walters Art Museum

Online Collection

Explore the Art Collection keyboard_arrow_down close
  • Explore By...
  • Category
  • Date
  • Medium
  • Creator
  • Places
  • Museum Locations
The Walters Art Museum walters-logo-white
  • Calendar
  • Art
  • Shop
  • Give Now
  • Visit
    • Plan Your Visit
    • Hours
    • Directions & Parking
    • Food, Drink, & Shop
    • Free Admission
    • Tours
    • Accessibility
    • Visitor Promise
  • Experience
    • Virtual Museum
    • Exhibitions & Installations
    • Programs & Events
    • Collections
    • Buildings
    • Baltimore
  • Support
    • Support the Walters
    • Corporate Partnerships
    • Institutional Funders
    • Evening at the Walters
    • Volunteers
  • About
    • Mission & Vision
    • Leadership
    • Strategic Plan
    • Land Acknowledgment
    • Research
    • Policies
Image for Bowl with Crowned Pierced Heart
tooltip-icon Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Zero

Download Image Zoom
Image for Bowl with Crowned Pierced Heart
tooltip-icon Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Zero

Download Image Zoom
  • arrow_forward_ios
  • arrow_forward_ios
Bowl with Crowned Pierced Heart Thumbnail
Bowl with Crowned Pierced Heart Thumbnail
Bowl with Crowned Pierced Heart Thumbnail
Bowl with Crowned Pierced Heart Thumbnail

Bowl with Crowned Pierced Heart

Giorgio Andreoli (Italian, ca. 1465/1470-1555) , workshop (Artist)
ca. 1510-1520 (Renaissance)
earthenware with tin glaze (maiolica) and luster decoration
(Renaissance Europe )

Giorgio di Pietro Andreoli, better known in his own time as Maestro Giorgio, was born in northern Italy in the later 1460s and established a workshop in Gubbio about 1490. He became renowned for the gold and red metallic lusters the shop employed to embellish the tin-glazed maiolica wares they had created themselves or which frequently came to them for adornment from other painters. As though in competition with the latter, Andreoli's signature frequently appears on the back of the pieces that passed through his shop (though not in this case). To fill the great demand for lusterware, Maestro Giorgio's shop produced stock pieces, and this bowl is probably such an example. It is typical of his early production in its use of stylized plant forms and widely popular symbolic imagery--here a pierced heart--all enlivened by the extensive use of gold-colored luster that adds a luxurious surface quality to the piece.
For more on earthenware and luster, see no. 48.2111.
For more on maiolica, see no. 48.1336.
For additional pieces from the workshop of Giorgio Andreoli, click on his name in the "creator" field.

Provenance
Provenance (from the French provenir, 'to come from/forth') is the chronology of the ownership, custody, or location of a historical object. Learn more about provenance at the Walters.

T. B. Clarke [date and mode of acquisition unknown] [no. 660]; Henry Walters, Baltimore, American Art Galleries, New York, Jan. 3, 1917, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.

Share
  • social-item
  • social-item
  • social-item

Geographies

Italy, Gubbio (Place of Origin)

Measurements

3 1/8 x 8 1/4 in. (8 x 21 cm)

Credit Line

Acquired by Henry Walters, 1917

Location in Museum

Charles Street: Third Floor: Renaissance Ceramics

Accession Number

In libraries, galleries, museums, and archives, an accession number is a unique identifier assigned to each object in the collection.

48.1331

Do you have additional information?

Notify the curator

Hours

  • Wednesday—Sunday: 10 a.m.—5 p.m.
  • Thursday: 1–8 p.m.
  • Monday—Tuesday: Closed

Location

600 N. Charles St.
Baltimore, MD
21201

Phone

410-547-9000

  • Visit
  • Experience
  • What's On
  • About
  • Shop
  • Support The Walters
copyright

The Walters Art Museum

  • Accessibility
  • Privacy Policy/Terms of Use
  • Copyright Info
  • facebook
  • instagram
  • twitter
modal close
Image for
tooltip-icon Creative Commons License

Tooltip description to define this term for visitors to the website.

zoom-btn zoom-btn preview-download
Image for
tooltip-icon Creative Commons License

Tooltip description to define this term for visitors to the website.

zoom-btn zoom-btn preview-download
  • arrow_forward_ios
  • arrow_forward_ios