Description
Petal-shaped canopies filled with floral designs and birds encircle an image of Nandi, the white bull mount of the Hindu destroyer god Shiva. Together they form a lotus flower. The birds are individualized species, showing the care of the metalworker to depict nature in all its variety and splendor. The fowl include peacocks, parakeets, bluebirds, and possibly even Indian rollers. To make the birds’ wings and the details on Nandi, the artist used thin gold wire to create cells, called cloisons, that could then be filled with colored glass. Some of the red glass has been lost on the outer rim of the plate.
Provenance
(Everett Rassiga, Inc., NY, sold to Severance and Greta Millikin) (?–1966); Severance A. [1895–1985] and Greta [Marguerite Steckerl] Millikin [1903–1989], Cleveland, OH, given to the Cleveland Museum of Art (1966–1989); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1989–)
Accession Number
1989.352
Medium
cloisonné enamel on gold
Dimensions
Diameter: 14.4 cm (5 11/16 in.)
Classification
Enamel
Credit Line
Bequest of Mrs. Severance A. Millikin