● On view now — Gallery 238
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Elaborately fashioned platters, vessels, and containers, often with decorative embellishments that indicated their specialized function or their owner’s social status, were displayed on the banquet tables of Renaissance Italy. Cisterns such as this were filled with cold water and used to cool wine bottles at feasts. Skillfully decorated by the Italian ceramic painter Francesco Durantino, this work typifies the Renaissance interest in both Christian imagery and scenes from pagan antiquity. It is covered with depictions of two famous battle scenes, one on land and one at sea. Although the exterior, adapted from frescoes by Raphael’s followers, represents a land battle culminating in the conversion of the Roman emperor Constantine I to Christianity, the cistern’s interior depicts a legendary naval disaster: the sinking of the Trojan hero Aeneas’s ships by the jealous goddess Hera. At the cistern’s center, the ships disappear beneath the waves, a playful conceit that was no doubt even more effective when the cistern was filled with water. The generously sized vessel displays all the characteristics that made maiolica, a tin-glazed earthenware, popular: brilliant colors, lively painting
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Southwark, London, England — Fecundity Platter
Jean-Claude Duplessis — Vase (Cuvette Mahon)
England — Wine Cistern
Rouen Potteries — Platter
Chinese export porcelain — Basket
Rouen Potteries — Cruet Stand
Worcester Porcelain Factory — Butter Tub
Delft, Netherlands — Plaque (one of a pair)
China — Punch Bowl
China, for the Thai Market — Bencharong (Five-Colored) Ware,
Chinese export porcelain — Punch Bowl
Lambeth Potteries — Charger