Overview
Identified stylistically as a 'Bianco di Faenza' style centerpiece, characterized by its thick, opaque white/cream glaze and relief-molded decoration without polychrome painting.
Identification
Photo reference
2 uploaded photos
Overview
Identified stylistically as a 'Bianco di Faenza' style centerpiece, characterized by its thick, opaque white/cream glaze and relief-molded decoration without polychrome painting.
Story
The 'Bianco di Faenza' style refers to a tradition of thick, opaque white tin-glazed earthenware originating in Faenza, Italy, which emphasizes sculptural form over painted decoration. During the mid-to-late 20th century, numerous factories in Italy and Portugal produced these relief-molded, monochromatic wares for the export market. Without a visible maker's mark, this piece is broadly attributed to Southern European mid-century commercial production.
Maker / Origin
Unattributed
Condition & Value
The piece appears structurally intact based on the provided description, and the presence of the matching underplate is a significant positive. However, the photos indicate brown spotting on the surface. It is currently unclear if this is removable surface dirt, permanent glaze crazing, or staining from use.
Full Research
Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.
Mid-century Southern European white-glazed ceramics (often marketed as creamware or 'blanc de chine' style) remain highly popular in the interior design market. Buyers are typically decorators or homeowners seeking large, sculptural centerpieces that fit 'grandmillennial' or traditional aesthetics. Because these items are bought primarily for their decorative impact rather than historical significance, scale, condition, and visual appeal drive the market more than specific factory attributions, though known makers do command a premium.
▲ Complete two-piece set (bowl and underplate) commands a premium over single bowls.
▲ Highly textured, relief-molded design aligns well with current traditional interior decor trends.
▲ Neutral cream/white glaze maximizes buyer appeal across various interior color palettes.
▼ Unverified base — a missing maker's mark keeps the estimate in unbranded, generic territory.
▼ Unknown dimensions — if the piece is smaller than 'grand' implies (e.g., under 10 inches), value drops significantly.
▼ Unverified brown spots — if this is permanent staining or deep crazing rather than dirt, it will deter retail buyers.
Best Venue
Carefully clean the piece with mild soap and water to determine if the brown spots are removable. Photograph the underside of both pieces to check for marks, and record the exact dimensions. Once documented, list the set on a decorative arts marketplace like Chairish or through a regional estate auction, emphasizing its scale and two-piece configuration.
Upside Potential
If a base mark is discovered that reveals a desirable Italian maker (e.g., Este Ceramiche, Richard Ginori) or a prominent luxury retailer (e.g., Mottahedeh, Tiffany & Co.), the value range shifts upward into the $500-$800 retail tier.
Also found — market-range context
Surfaced during research but not used to anchor the valuation — wrong form, species, era, or no published price. Shown so the market range around this item is visible.