Monday, March 23, 2020

British Pottery Solid Agate Pecten Shell Teapot and Cover, Circa 1755-60.

British Pottery Solid Agate Pecten Shell Teapot and Cover,
Circa 1755-60.



The lead-glazed light cream and red agateware pottery teapot is molded in the form of a pecten shell with a foo-dog finial and a serpent spout.

Dimensions: 5 3/4 inches high x 6 1/2 inches wide x 3 1/4 inches deep ( 9.08cm x 16.51cm x 8.26cm)


Reference:
 (http://www.chipstone.org/article.php/78/Ceramics-in-America-2003/Swirls-and-Whirls:-English-Agateware-Technology)

See Michelle Erickson and Robert Hunter, Swirls and Whirls: English Agateware Technology, Pages 87-110, Ceramics in America, 2003 and illustrated online at Chipstone's site, figure 7 from the Chipstone Collection for similar coloration.

The Burnap Collection of English Pottery, Ross E. Taggart, Nelson Gallery for a similar example.

Saturday, March 21, 2020

Newcastle Pearlware Inkwell, Sewell, Newcastle.


                                                                                    Rare Pearlware Ink Stand with pineapple-shaped
Candleholder,
Sewells, St. Anthonys Pottery, Newcastle,
Circa 1804-20.

A wonderful pearlware inkstand complete with all its parts.  The stand consists of a lower circular section with an impressed design of overlapping circles to the sides which to the rear have been punched out leaving an openwork design of ovals and triangles.

The top front third is a cover, surmounted with a lion on a large oak leaf, to cover a compartment for the quill nibs.  The back section has a series of small circular holes for the quills and three cutouts to contain the existing separate inkwell, sander, and pineapple-shaped candleholder.

Diameter: 7 1/4 inches.

Provenance: Mario Buatta
With Earle D. Vandekar of Knightsbridge, Inc.

Reference: Listed in the Sewell pattern book #87.

link to object

Friday, June 15, 2018

Piero Fornasetti Porcelain Fish Appetizer Hors D'oeuvre Tray,
Pesces,
The early 1960s.



The rare & beautiful hors d'oeuvre dishes and tray consists of an image of a fish displayed on four separate dishes placed in their original gold-toned metal tray.

Dimensions: 
The Tray measures  19 1/2 inches long x 6 inches wide x 1 inch high ( 49.5 x 15.2 x 2.5 cm).
 Each dish: 5 5/8 inches long 4 1/4 inches wide x  1 1/4 inches high ( 14.3 x 10.7 x 3.1 cm).

Reference: Fornasetti: The Complete Universe, Edited by Barnaba Fornasetti, Illustration-Page 594-595, #108, Pesces (Fish), tray with four appetizer bowls, early 1960's.

Fornasetti: Designer of Dreams, Patrick Mauries, Page 264 for illustration os the same form and design.

Saturday, June 9, 2018

Coalport Porcelain Yellow-ground Wine Coolers.

Coalport Porcelain Yellow-ground Wine Coolers, 
Earl's Monogram,
Circa 1810.


Each of the circular yellow-ground porcelain wine coolers has a polychrome scrolling foliate and urn band above a crest of an Earl with a crown above a monogram of interlaced KA, all on a yellow ground.


Dimensions: Height 6 1/4 inches, diameter 9 1/2 inches.

The monogram is seemingly made up of the letters K and A under an Earl’s coronet. It may represent either a single individual with both initials or the Christian names of a married couple.
#coalport #antiqueporcelain

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

East India Company Bird Paintings

As British employees of the East India Company moved into India to work in the 18th & 19th century, they encountered places and scenes which were considered exotic and were, of course, very different from home.  To record these foreign places and things, local artists were employed to paint them.

Here are four different birds-


Titled Bilace


Titled Kanra


Titled Muchrunga


Titled  Kouroo


Tuesday, May 10, 2016

A Vintage Piero Fornasetti Sezioni Di Frutta Plate

A Vintage Piero Fornasetti Sezioni Di Frutta Plate 
Depicting an Eggplant or Aubergine,  
#2 in Series, 
1960's.


(example from exhibition at the Fornasetti showroom 2013)

This is a fantastic series with split vegetables and fruits depicted in rich colour and detail.  This porcelain plate depicts an eggplant (or aubergine) and is beautifully rendered in the trompe l’'oeil tradition.

Dimension: 9 3/4 inches across x 1 inch high.

The plates were produced in the 1950s/60s.  

Reference: Fornasetti: The Complete Universe, edited by Barnaba Fornasetti, page 604, #128 for examples laid out on a table.

Fornasetti at his strangest- Tema E Variazioni #281.

A Piero Fornasetti Plate Tema E Variazioni #281,
1960's.




The plate is one of the most unusual Tema E Variazioni plates in the series.  It was also used on the slip cover of My Life and Times by Henry Miller (1972).

Diameter: 10.25 inches

Piero Fornasetti's most famous work is, without a doubt, his illustrations featuring the face Lina Cavalieri, an operatic soprano.  Fornasetti found her face in a 19th century magazine, turning the black and white image into an iconic representation of his work. It was known as the “Tema e Variazioni” (theme and variation) plate series.

He said: "What inspired me to create more than 500 variations on the face of a woman? I don’t know. I began to make them and I never stopped. "

Reference:
Fornasetti: Designer of Dreams, Patrick Mauries, page 192.  Mauries writes: For Fornasetti, a single product never exhausted the possibilities of an idea.  He loved to let his imagination roam, finding more and more layers of meaning and association in the process.  Much of his work, therefore, takes the form of variations on a theme.

Favourite themes include the Sun, playing cards, harlequin, hands and- above all- an enigmatic woman's face that he found in a 19th century French illustrated magazine and which fired him to go on creating image after image until he had turned out over 500, most of them in the form of dinner plates..  They are, in a way, a mediation on the mystery of femininity, the same face appearing, as in a dream, as a moon, a flower, a lake, a mask, a mosaic, a clock, a single disembodied eye..


Reference:
(http://www.fornasetti.com/en/story/temavariazioni/)

TEMA E VARIAZIONI

For Piero Fornasetti, a single idea provided enough inspiration to create infinite variations. In fact, much of his work involved constant evolutions of specific themes. By allowing his imagination to roam freely. Fornasetti was able to constantly reinvent or reinterpret an image.

Of these themes, the most recurrent are: the sun, playing cards, harlequins, hands, self-portraits. But the most famous, the image that inspired Fornasetti to coin the title ‘Tema e Variazioni’, is the enigmatic face of a woman: the opera singer Lina Cavalieri.

He found that now iconic face as he leafed through a 19th century French magazine and became fascinated. Taking her as much as a muse and as a motif, he would return to Lina Cavalieri’s face again and again throughout his career. The archetypal classic female features, and enigmatic expression of Lina Cavalieri became Fornasetti’s most frequently used template and upon which he based more than 350 variations.

Lina Cavalieri’s face, explained Piero Fornasetti, was another archetype – a quintessentially beautiful and classic image, like a Greek statue, enigmatic like the ‘Gioconda’ and therefore able to take shape into the idea that was slowly building in his mind. It was this formal, graphic appeal (rather than Lina Cavalieri’s celebrity) that demanded such loyalty and inspired the spontaneous and ceaseless creativity of Fornasetti. For him, this face became the ultimate enduring motif. With great modesty all these works were reproduced on a series of everyday objects like the plate. Tema e Variazioni shows its variations playing with one idea.