Posted 13 years ago
dholdefer
(5 items)
WILLIAM HOWSON TAYLOR
RUSKIN POTTERY Irredescent Bowl DATED 1920
Glen Lukens, Blue Bowl
Jacques Sicard Weller Pottery Vase
Raku Tea Bowl
Interesting Ceramic Glazes from the Past | ||
Studio Art Pottery1137 of 1190 |
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Posted 13 years ago
dholdefer
(5 items)
WILLIAM HOWSON TAYLOR
RUSKIN POTTERY Irredescent Bowl DATED 1920
Glen Lukens, Blue Bowl
Jacques Sicard Weller Pottery Vase
Raku Tea Bowl
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stunning colours, very beautiful!....:-)
Quadruple WOW!
Beautiful Ruskin bowl and I adore that Raku bowl! And at the Sicard ........
and thank you for introducing me to Missouri's Glen Lukens. He did glass too!
Glen Lukens (American, 1887-1967) Blue Bowl ca. 1930s
Ceramic This exhibition celebrates the work of Missouri-born ceramicist Glen Lukens. At a time when American pottery production was dominated by design and decoration, Lukens forged new rough clay designs and discovered new glazes and glaze techniques. His work married bright colors to raw surfaces and pioneered a new approach to the ceramic vessel. Lukens’ innovations were a boon to the California dinnerware industry of the 1930s. He also worked with glass, paying special attention to the development of the vessels’ colors. An award-winning ceramicist and teacher, Glen Lukens helped change the way we see and interpret ceramics today. The exhibition Feeling, Thought and Spirit: The Ceramic Work of Glen Lukens pays tribute to one of America's innovative twentieth century ceramicists.
Does anyone know if Ruskin Pottery ever made "metal" bowls. The irridescent bowl above is very, very thin and very, very light...although I have been assured that it is "pottery"; it feels like a metal like copper. Anyone seen a Ruskin piece this thin and light??
I've not heard of it. It is pottery. From 1901 William Nixon was recruited from Wedgwood as head turner. These potters were amazing at what they did: another factory that did this very thin ware on lustre pieces was Royal Lancastrian. Their thrower was a guy called E.T.Radford. The Howson Taylors were very fastidious about their glazes and the secrets went with them to their graves.
You have some very lovely vases here.
Read a short article here where a bowl like yours is mentioned : http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Weekend%3A+Antiques+and+collecting+-+Glory+of+the+Ruskin+glaze%3B+Richard...-a082464586
"The workers were encouraged to search the natural world around them for inspiration. It means that you have the colours of pink hawthorn in some of the glazes along with gorse yellows or a wonderful harebell blue. I have also seen glazes which suggest sloughed snake skins and the most beautiful purples, reminiscent of late afternoon light, on Ruskin eggshell bowls, almost too delicate to handle. "
One other thing though: you will see the Ruskin name on the back of silver and white metal mounts of their cabochons that are brooches.
Thanks for the information...I guess it is time for me to believe what you and the seller have said, and stop believing what my eyes and touch say...