Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Designing ornamental vases or urns was particularly popular during the mid-18th century since the only limit to the possibilities was the imagination of the artist. Saly, a sculptor by training, was a student at the French Academy in Rome from 1740 to 1746, at which time he published a set of 30 etchings. Saly began with basic antique vase forms but deviated from classical ornament to use a rich variety of fantastic creatures for embellishment.
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Jacques François Joseph Saly — Vase with a Male Siren holdin
Jacques François Joseph Saly — Design for a Vase with a Bacc
Virgil Solis (German, 1514–1562) — Design for a Vase
Wenzel Jamnitzer I (German, 1508/09–1585) — Ornamental Vase
Enea Vico — Antique Lidded Vase with Two Handles emerging fr
Enea Vico — Antique Lidded Urn Decorated with a Motif of Dia
L.N. Percenet — Design for a Vase
Jean Le Pautre|Claude Ballin the Elder — Bronze Garden Vase
Claes Jansz. Visscher|René Boyvin|Rosso Fiorentino|Frederick
Enea Vico — Vase with Two Grotesque Masks, plate six from A
Enea Vico (Italian, 1523–1567) — Ewer Ornamented with Dolphi
Jacques François Joseph Saly — Monumental Vase with Anthropo