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Collections

Unidentified artist
Apothecary Jar (Albarelo)circa 1700-1750

Not on view
Tin-glazed earthenware cylindrical vessel with cobalt blue decoration, featuring a painted bird, scrolling cloud forms, and banded borders on a white ground
Tin-glazed earthenware albarello with waisted cylindrical form, decorated in cobalt blue on white with foliate scrolls and an architectural motif at center; banded border above undecorated lower body.
Ceramic albarello with white tin glaze and cobalt blue decoration depicting scrolling foliage, clouds, a bird in flight, and an architectural structure with arches; cylindrical waisted form with painted border bands.
Tin-glazed earthenware albarello with cobalt blue decoration on white ground; cylindrical form with waisted profile; painted foliate scrolls, architectural arch, and floral motifs on the upper body; plain white lower section.
Artist or Maker
Unidentified artist
Title
Apothecary Jar (Albarelo)
Place Made
Mexico, Puebla de los Ángeles
Date Made
circa 1700-1750
Medium
Tin-glazed earthenware
Dimensions
11 × 4 in. (27.94 × 10.16 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Ron A. Belkin, Long Beach, California
Accession Number
M.2014.160.2
Classification
Furnishings
Collecting Area
Latin American Art
Curatorial Notes
In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the Mexican city of Puebla became a production center for fine earthen-ware and tiles later known as "Talavera poblana." The earliest Puebla majolica (tin-glazed earthenware) shows Spanish and Hispano-Islamic influences. However, Puebla is best known for the Chinese-inspired blue-and-white majolica it began producing in the second quarter of the seventeenth century, which remained popular throughout the eighteenth century. The importation of Asian goods to the Spanish colonies via the Manila Galleon greatly impacted the development of Talavera poblana. The apothecary jar was a common shape used by Spanish and Mexican pharmacies to store herbs and ointments; it was likely kept on a shelf and covered with cloth or leather.
Provenance
Charles Rodney Sadleir, Cuernavaca, Mexico; Bonhams & Butterfields, San Francisco, November 3, 2003, lot 2530; Ronald A. Belkin, Long Beach, California, 2003; LACMA, 2014.