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Collections

José Alves Cunha
Platecirca 1860-1885

Not on view
Circular ceramic dish viewed from above, with a dark green rim and moss-textured well densely decorated with high-relief sculpted frogs, lizards, and a coiled snake in naturalistic glazes
Artist or Maker
José Alves Cunha
Portugal, 1860-circa 1885
Title
Plate
Place Made
Portugal
Date Made
circa 1860-1885
Medium
Glazed earthenware
Dimensions
Height: 2 3/4 in. (6.99 cm) Diameter: 11 in. (27.94 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Barbara Barbara and Marty Frenkel
Accession Number
M.2013.193.6
Classification
Furnishings
Collecting Area
Decorative Arts and Design
Curatorial Notes

During the 19th century, there was a craze for work by the Renaissance potter Bernard Palissy (1510-1590) in both France and Portugal, inspiring interest in the originals, and the development of revival pieces in the same style.

In Portugal, manufacturing was concentrated in the town of Caldas da Rainha, where, in the 1850s, Manuel Cipriano Gomes Mafra (1830-1905) began to adapt Palissy’s style in a strikingly different direction. He incorporated the technique of pressing wet clay through a sieve to create the effect of moss as his principal background and expanded the subject matter, introducing narrative elements. A fight between a lizard and a snake is the subject of this plate by José Alvez Cunha (active 1860-ca.1885), whose output is almost indistinguishable from that of Mafra. Cunha may have worked for Mafra at one time.