Pilgrim bottle / scent bottle
Object NamePilgrim bottle / scent bottle
Artist / Maker
Johann Jacob Irminger
(German, active dates 1710 - 1720)
Manufacturer
Meissen
(German, founded 1710)
Datec. 1710-1715
OriginGermany
MediumStoneware
Dimensions3 5/8 × 2 × 1 in. (9.2 × 5.1 × 2.5 cm)
ClassificationsDecorative Arts, Ceramics
Credit LineGift of Ann and Henry Brunnier. In the Ann and Henry Brunnier Collection, Brunnier Art Museum, University Museums, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa.
Object number2.6.2
Status
Not on viewCollections
CultureGerman
Label TextIn 1708 Johann Friedrich Bottger, an alchemist in the Saxon court of Augustus the Strong, was experimenting to fine the secret to making true hard- paste porcelain similar to that produced in China and Japan. During these experiments, Bottger and his associate, Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhausen, developed a hard reddish-brown stoneware. It became an immediate commercial success and continued to be produced for a number of years, even after the discovery of hard-paste porcelain in Europe. One of the most attractive of ceramic materials and a technical marvel, the stoneware is so hard that it could be polished on the lapidary's wheel.
The pilgrim bottle in form can be traced to ancient Rome, originally made to be carried during travel. The flat shape made it more practical for carrying on journeys, since it was usually slung from a saddle or shoulder by a rope or strap passed through the slots on each side. By the sixteenth century, pilgrim bottles of silver or fine ceramic material, such as this one, were produced for more decorative than practical purposes. In fact, most form made of Bottger's red stoneware were drawn from silver because the clay was exceptionally plastic and lent itself to applied decoration in silversmith’s style, such as the two women's heads on either side of the bottle seen here.
The pilgrim bottle was used to hold or dispense perfumes or precious oils or fluids.
Locations
- (not entered) Iowa State University, Brunnier Main Storage
Object Name: Caster Set with Glass Bottles
Rogers Bros.
c. 1880
Object number: 88.7.1a-l
Object Name: Perfume Bottle and Stopper
c. 1840-1860
Object number: 3.6.23ab
Object Name: Beaker and Beaker Lid
Meissen
19-20th century
Object number: 2.6.54ab
Object Name: Toilet Bottle with Stopper
Workshop of Friedrich Egermann
c. 1830
Object number: 3.6.81ab