File:Mithridatum Drug Jar, Annibale Fontana.jpg

Drug jar for Mithridate, by Annibale Fontana.

Accompanying text:


 * "Designed as a pair, these elaborately modeled drug jars were made to contain mithridatum and theriac, used as antidotes to poisons, to ward off the plague, and as general cure-alls. They were among the most highly prized and complex drugs in the Renaissance pharmacy, especially in Italy and France, where they continued to be made for centuries. The highly decorative combination of gilding and lead-white paint on the outside of the vessels disguises their basic function as drug jars, a purpose supported by the fact that their interiors are glazed to make them watertight. These jars, elaborately decorated with a rich sampling of sixteenth-century ornament, would have been prominently displayed by the owner or pharmacy to which they belonged. The vigorous strapwork, masks, and relief and figural decoration are typical of Italian Mannerist decorative arts and are closely related to the work of the most important Milanese sculptor of the period, Annibale Fontana."

Creation Date: about 1580 - 1590

Materials and Techniques: Painted and gilt terracotta

Contributor: J. Paul Getty Museum

Owner Location: Los Angeles, California, USA

Credit Line: J. Paul Getty Museum

Rights: http://www.getty.edu/legal/copyright.html

Source: http://www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/artObjectDetails?artobj=1407

Fair-use rationale for Mithridate

 * 1) Image uniquely illustrates content in the article.
 * 2) No other free use images were available.
 * 3) The image is of a lower resolution than the original.
 * 4) The image doesn't limit the museum's commercial abilities in any way.