Silverexpand_more
The Eloise and Elliot Kaplan Endowment for Judaicaexpand_more 2015.20
This is the largest extant Passover seder plate of silver from Turin of the 19th century. In contrast to typical seder plates of the period (or earlier), those produced in Piedmont (Italy) were never decorated with Hebrew inscriptions referring to the Passover Seder. This was because they served a double function in Jewish households there in the 18th and 19th centuries, until the Italian unification granted full emancipation in 1861. When not in use during the seder, the the plate could be shown as part of the credenza, the spectacular display of silver in the private house. It therefore would have blended in effortlessly with a secular custom of the surrounding gentile culture, which the Jews of Piedmont embraced, as it hailed new liberties and a gradual end of their oppression. As such, the adoption of neoclassical ornamentation was associated with religious freedom.
This custom originated in the 18th- century, when the enlightened King Vittorio Amedeo III of Savoy lifted the ban for Jews to train and practice as silversmiths, and accordingly allowed Jewish silversmiths to become members of this craft’s guild, the Università degli Orefici ed Argentieri. im 1817-1818, when Pacifico Levi was nominated for membership to the guild, he was joined by a dozen other Jewish goldsmiths and silversmiths. Levi’s works were sought after by fellow Jews and gentiles alike. For its size and its lavish, highly detailed decoration, the present Passover Seder Plate outshines all other extant seder plates Levi, or any other Piedmontese master of the period.
This record has been reviewed by our curatorial staff but may be incomplete. These records are frequently revised and enhanced. If you notice a mistake or have additional information about this object, please email collectionsdata@artsmia.org.
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