c. 1560
During the second half of the sixteenth century, a great profusion of colors and motifs begins to appear in the Iznik tiles. This tile, 9 1/2 inches square, features the traditional blue and turquoise on a white slip, but a bright orange has been added. The rumi pattern spirals from one square to another and the glaze is thick, forming little mounds on the white slip. Since these tiles are identical in pattern to those framing the doorway of the famous Rustem Pasha Mosque in Istanbul (built by the architect Sinan in 1560) we may assume that they date from this period and may even have formed part of a consignment of tiles for the building.
H: 24.5 x W: 24.5 x Depth: 1.8 cm (9 5/8 x 9 5/8 x 11/16 in.)
John Goelet, New York, NY, (by 1960), gift; to Fogg Art Museum, 1960.
Gilded bronze
16th-17th centuryTurkishLimestone with traces of polychromy
12th centuryFrenchStone
11th centuryFrenchStone
RomanFritware
13th centuryPersianMarble
14th centuryFrenchFritware
17th-18th centuryTurkishLimestone, pelmicrite
12th centuryFrenchDolomite
14th centurySpanish, CatalonianLimestone
12th centuryFrenchCeramic
15th centuryAustrianPolychromed stone
13th-14th centuryFrench