Earthenware votive plaque with maiolica glaze
- Made:
- 1760-1800
Earthenware votive plaque with maiolica glaze, depicts woman sick in bed attended by woman and priest. Also Virgin and Child motif, product of Deruta potteries, Italian, 1760-1800
Painted plaques like this are known as ‘ex votos’, meaning ‘from a vow’ in Latin. Left in a church in gratitude for answered prayers, each one tells a story of a cure or delivery from disaster through the intervention of the Virgin Mary or another Christian saint.
Ex votos can take various forms. This colourful glazed pottery example, known as majolica, is from Deruta in the province of Umbria, Italy, a town renowned for its ceramics since the 1400s. It depicts a sick woman in bed. The letters P.G.R. stand for Per Grazia Ricevuta (By Grace Recieved).
Details
- Category:
- Medical Ceramic-ware
- Collection:
- Sir Henry Wellcome's Museum Collection
- Object Number:
- A657841
- Materials:
- earthenware (tin-glazed)
- Measurements:
-
overall: 252 mm x 328 mm x 35 mm, 2.68 kg
- type:
- plaques
- credit:
- Loan, Wellcome Trust