Posted 11 years ago
cogito
(124 items)
Hand-thrown and glazed stoneware vase in the Japoniste style by the master potter, Auguste Delaherche. Hand-signed underneath with Delaherche's cryptic date/numbering scheme he adopted post-1904. Prior to 1904, Delaherche's ceramics were thrown and glazed by others under his direction. Delaherche hand-produced unique one-of-a-kind stoneware pieces for a brief period from 1904 to 1910, after which he switched to porcelain wares for the rest of his life.
While simplistic, arbitrary and spare looking in decor, this appearance is far from the case. What looks to be a splash of purple glaze trailing down one side of the vase is actually an undercoat color that has been revealed by Delaherche ever so slightly raising the surface of the vase in this area, such that when it was fired it would cause the sandstone glaze to trail off the sides revealing the underlying colors. I have no clue how he made the horizontal darker brown coloration in that area. The glaze effects on that side of the vase remind me of an erupting "Old Faithful." Dimensions: 7.25” height x 6.75" width.
---------------
From a December 1920 "La France" art journal article on the master ceramist:
"Auguste Delaherche, hermit and philosopher, fashions pots and vases and vessels of pure outline in a little hut which crowns the pensive hillside of La Chapelle-aux-Pots, a village in the red sand district of Armentieres. Two hours away is Paris, but Paris is noisy and the men and women who disport themselves there are eaten up with passions and appetites that render them odious to this 20th century Diogenes. As a result, the great potter and ceramist seldom visits the center of the universe and the shops where Fame is manufactured and Reputation made up to know him not. From time to time interviewers have sought him out in his hermitage, as Alexander the Great is said to have sought out Diogenes in his cask, and like Diogenes he has told them to begin, as they were shutting out his view of the sun. And, yet despite this reticence, this shunning of publicity, August Delaherche is a name to conjure with wherever connoisseurs of pottery, amateurs of kiln-made jewels, or lovers of art congregate. To possess in one's collection one of Delaherche's Gres Flambes is to proclaim oneself of the cognoscenti of modern ceramic art. There is nothing being turned out of kilns anywhere that can compare in contour or in color with the alchemies that come out of this modern Prometheus' oven."
Just wonderful! Awesome pot!
Thanks for sharing yet again!
Stunning!!!
Thanks guys. This one was a bit of a departure for me given the spare Japoniste style, but how could one pass up a hand-thrown pot by the godfather of modern studio art pottery?!
No argument from me.
Fabulous!
I have three Delaherche stoneware pots. All are numbered and have his name in a "printed" format versus your signed example. I assume therefore they are all pre-1904?
No argument here as well !!! stunning!!
Hi, VioletOrange. The stamped Delaherche pieces are certainly pre-1904. I'm not certain of the chronology of the various stamps, though. Please post your Delaherche vases, if you haven't already.
Just posted them.
Is anyone familiar with Patrick Nordström? In Sweden he is known as the "Father of Stoneware". Worked for a while at Royal Copenhagen in Denmark, then had his own studio. I have a few of his pieces and three examples by a lesser known but brilliant ceramist that worked with him, Karin Blom - all three of hers in the Japoniste style. Another Royal Copenhagen favorite of mine Valdemar Englehart, extraordinary crystalline glazes.
Yes, he is a very important figure in Danish ceramics, thanks to his pioneering work with glazes at Royal Copenhagen. PN pottery is seen quite often here (in Denmark) on auctions (rarely on antiques markets etc.). Please do post your PN vases at some point!
Wonderful piece! We just visited the show at the Met last Sunday. A show not to be missed. Also enjoyed the Carlo Scarpa and more. We purchased a piece of Delaherche in Paris in the 90's and just love it. It is a mate to one in the Musee d'Orsay.
Bravo
After sooo long I just realized i wasn't following you, so now i must catch up with all the old postings :)
You've got some truly amazing Art Nouveau pottery!!!
Thanks guys. I love this piece largely because I know that it was actually handled by the artist. Yes, there are much better designed and glazed pieces, but those tend to be during his period of larger production where others were working his designs and glaze mixtures. What excites me most is seeing things like the partial finger print of the actual artist.