Chocolate Jar with Iron-locked Lid

Art Institute of Chicago

Chocolate Jar with Iron-locked Lid

Talavera poblana

Date
1725–75
Medium
Tin-glazed earthenware
Culture
Puebla
Department
Arts of the Americas
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

Talavera poblana , a tin-glazed earthenware, was made in the central Mexican town of Puebla beginning in the sixteenth-century. The name likely refers to the majolica-producing city of Talavera de la Reina in Spain. Talavera emulated the designs of fashionable imported Spanish ceramics; like its Spanish prototypes, it showed the influence of Islamic, Chinese, Italian, and French ceramics, all present in cosmopolitan Spain during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries and transmitted to Mexico during the colonial period. This chocolate jar–with an iron cover, collar, and lock–would have been used to store valuable commodities like cacao beans. The blue-and-white ornamentation features panels composed of fringed curtains and scrolled leaves that frame long-tailed birds, a popular motif that may recall Chinese export Swatow ware.

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Object type
AAT300386308

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