Spode Blue Italian
Unlike many of the other classical scene patterns of the period, the origin of the view for the Blue Italian pattern is not certain, the scene has puzzled collectors for many years. The Spode engravers derived many of their pictorial subjects from scenes which had appeared as prints. Publications of prints of scenes associated with the Grand Tour were the inspiration for many patterns produced at this time.
Recently, Tilman Lichtenthaeler, a Spode collector and researcher, has carried out an architectural quest to trace the building types in an attempt to unravel the mystery of the source of the Blue Italian scene. It seems that there is no one place in Italy that corresponds to all the features included in the picture. The scene is a composition made up of several elements. The ruin on the left, although architecturally incorrect, might have been based on the Great Bath at Tivoli, near Rome. The row of houses along the left bank of the river is similar those of the Latium area near Umbria, north of Rome. The castle in the distance is of a type which occurs only in Northern Italy in the regions of Piedmont and Lombardy.
From its first introduction Spode's Blue Italian was an immediate success. Remarkably it has retained its immense popularity for over 180 years. The reason for its tremendous appeal is difficult to place perhaps it is due to the unusual combination of the classical scene with the Chinese border, a direct copy of an Imari design on Chinese export porcelain dating from about 1735. This unusual and difficult combination of oriental and western designs works perfectly in the Blue Italian pattern.
We are grateful to the Spode Museum in producing this account of Spode's Blue Italian pattern.