González Martí National Museum of Ceramics and Decorative Arts


The National Museum of Ceramics and Decorative Arts "González Martí", located in Valencia, Spain, is a museum dedicated to ceramics, porcelains and other decorative arts such as textile art, traditional costumes and furniture.
Housed in the Palace of the Marqués de Dos Aguas, it was founded on 7 February 1947, from the donation of Manuel González Martí's ceramics collection. Seven years later, once the restoration of the palace was completed, the museum opened to the public on 18 June 1954.

Building

The palace, originally a Gothic building, was fully reshaped to Baroque in the mid-18th century, when Hipolito Rovira designed its façade, made by the Valencian sculptor Ignacio Vergara. Nowadays, as the result of several later remodelings, it combines mainly Rococo, Neoclassical and Oriental style.
Declared a historical-artistic monument in 1941, the building was bought by state in 1949 to locate Gonzalez Martí ceramics collection. Since then, there have been numerous interventions, including infrastructure improvements and renovation of the museum spaces.
The last restoration took place between 1990 and 1998, carried out by the architect Ginés Sánchez Hevia.

Ground floor

Mostly dedicated to temporary exhibitions, in this floor is the remarkable "carriage patio" and the main stairs.

First floor

The first floor spans the private rooms of the Marquis de Dos Aguas, decorated with stucco, wall and ceiling paintings made by artists such as Plácido Frances y Pascual, José Felipe Parra and José Brel Guiralt in the 19th century. Marble floors are of different colors, with the initials "MD", corresponding at the Marquis de Dos Aguas.
Outstanding rooms are The Ballroom, the Red Room, the Eastern Sitting Room, equipped with part of the original furniture. Furthermore, all rooms are ornamented with works of art, lamps, clocks, vases, etc.; reflecting the elegance and style of the time.

Second floor

Divided in several rooms, this whole floor is entirely dedicated to the exhibition of the ceramics collection, including one adapted to reproduce a typical Valencian kitchen, designed by self-Manuel González Martí, with mosaics, friezes and decorative panels of the 18th and 19th centuries. The decoration of this space is complemented with popular contemporary ceramic pots and copper objects.

Collections

In 1969 the museum increased its collection with numerous pieces of furniture, clothing, paintings, etc., with special interest in Valencian tradition and local artists.

Clothing

The museum received many valuable donations of ancient costumes since its foundation. In the past, the pieces were presented on wood mannequins with accessories as umbrellas, hats, blankets or fans. As light and the dust accumulated on the costumes caused considerable deterioration over time, it was agreed to withdraw the permanent collection, publishing catalogues and planning temporary exhibitions to show some pieces to the public.
Included in the fabrics collection there are a series of twelve decorative Coptic textiles fragments, highlighting a tabulae with fig leaves decoration, dated between 140-380 AD; a fabric with polychrome bands dated between 210-390 AD; a fragment with dark background and two-colored decoration dated between 250-420 AD; and other fragment divided in three ornamental strips with putti and ducks on the central part and riders contained by side scrolls in laterals. This collection was purchased in el Rastro in 1964 by González Martí.

Painting

The museum contains paintings such as José Vicente Perez y Vela's Immaculate Conception ; San Vicente Martir, an anonymous acquired in 1917, dated from the early 17th century and defrocked from the Cistercian monastery of Santa María de Benifassà; and several works from Ignacio Pinazo, a Valencian 19th century painter.
Another important quantity of paintings arrived at the museum because of the intervention of its founder, through the Commission for the Protection and Salvage of Valencian Artistic Treasures, in charge of protecting art objects at the beginning of the Spanish Civil War. Among these works there are two oil on panel depicting St. Francis of Assisi and St. Vincent Ferrer, probably tabernacle doors and attributed to Nicolás Borrás.
While most paintings are religious, there are also portraits and landscapes such as Rural landscape at sunset and a View of a harbor at dawn, under the influence of Dutch painting.
Other pieces come from private donations or from the artists themselves, most of the 19th and 20th centuries. It is worth mentioning Ricardo Verde Rubio, José Benlliure or Ignasi Pinazo i Camarlench.

Ceramics

The museum collection comprises from antique pottery: Greek, Iberian and Roman to modernism piece. The first collection donated by founder González Martí, consisted of about 6.000 items, mostly ceramics from the medieval period to popular 19th-century Valencian tiles.
Hispano-Moresque ware is well represented by 13th and 14th centuries pieces decorated in green and manganese, lusterware, or other with white stanniferous enamel or cobalt blue luster. These types of Muslim ceramics gave way to the technical basics of 15th century Spanish pottery and Christian production. The Gonzalez Martí collection shows works from different places, mainly Italian and Spanish productions.
There are medieval architectonical pieces from diverse Valencian palaces and headquarters, such heraldic shields or floor tiles and socarrats, destined to interior ceilings, terraces friezes, stairs or other places. Local pieces are exhibited with other contemporary of Spanish and Italian production.
’s workshop.
At the time of the Renaissance, Florence was a producer of polychrome glazed ceramic, which arrived to Spain through the continental trade. One example of this type of ceramic is a 17th-century Florentine tondo depicting Madonna and Child, attributed to the manufacture of Benedetto Buglioni’s workshop.
In the collection there are several pieces from the Royal Factory of Alcora, whose ceramic and porcelain works influenced Valencian centers, especially Manises, that introduced polychrome pieces.
Since 2012 the museum owns an 18th-century Neapolitan nativity scene that consists of 29 figures ranging between 10 and 40 cm, made with wire body, wooden limbs and terracotta head, dressed with fine period clothes and decked with rich accessories.
Between the latest showed objects, there are Modernist works of the Valencian sculptor Benlliure and some ceramic pieces of the 20th century donated by Pablo Picasso.

Other collections

Displayed in the Carriage patio are the Nymphs' coach designed by Hipólito Rovira and Ignacio Vergara in 1753; an Empire style carriage, owned by the Marquis de Llanera; and a Rococo sedan chair, also of the 18th century.