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Dalpayrat "Sang de Boeuf" Glazed Organic Form Oil Lamp or Sprinkler

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    Posted 12 years ago

    cogito
    (124 items)

    Dalpayrat organic "gourd or rolled skin" ceramic form, typical of his mid-period works for La Maison Moderne (Paris) and rendered in his signature wonderfully colorful flambé glaze. The glaze features and colors are highlighted by the undulating filled crevices and spare raised portions of this particular handworked form type. The purpose of this object is somewhat of a mystery, though, as it is quite small but could have served as either a desk oil lamp or possibly a rose water sprinkler (?). While this example is unsigned, a virtually identical piece was sold 12/2011 with the stamp "Les grands feux de Dalpayrat," which would place the form to around 1904-1906. Dimensions: 2"(H) x 3.6"(D).

    Adrien-Pierre Dalpayrat (French, 1844–1910) was born in Limoges. As a youngster with an interest in painting and design, he attended a local art school and subsequently trained at the Limoges Municipal School of Porcelain Painting. In the first decades of his career, Dalpayrat was a faïence painter, working at six different manufactories between 1867 and 1888. In 1889, he settled down near Paris in Bourg-la-Reine, a town with a long history of porcelain manufacture. At around this time, he dropped the designation of 'porcelain painter' and began to identify himself as a 'ceramist' or 'artist-ceramist.' From that time forward, he devoted his time mostly to stoneware, a material revered for its Japanese associations and in vogue at the time given the published and popular review of Asian art by Sigfried Bing. Dalpayrat's studio executed objects by Maurice Dufrêne, designer of furniture, textiles, glassware, silverware, and ceramics. Dufrêne was the director and manager of La Maison Moderne, an association of artists who worked together to create designs that could be produced in multiples.

    Dalpayrat was well known for his sang de boeuf (oxblood) flambé pottery, so much so that the term "Dalpayrat red" was coined to designate his distinctive glaze. Modeled after the oxblood glazes on Chinese pottery centuries earlier, Dalpayrat's version diverges in interesting and organic ways with swirls of color and irregular surface characteristics that perfectly encapsulates the French Art Nouveau aesthetic. Perfected by 1892, Dalpayrat unveiled his oxblood glaze at the prestigious Galerie Georges Petit in Paris, where he exhibited 50 stoneware pieces based on models by Alphonse Voisin-Delacroix. His success with the high fire glazed stoneware was immediate, and since that fateful exhibition, Dalpayrat has been recognized as a master of the art form and a key figure in French Art Nouveau.

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