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Eva Zeisel

 
 

(1906- )

After an early career in Europe Hungarian born Eva Zeisel emigrated to the United States in 1938 and became one of the most celebrated designers of 20th century tableware. Her early pottery designs were influenced by Hungarian folk art as well more fashionable Wiener Werkstätte trends. After a period designing teasets for the Kispester Pottery in Budapest, she produced designs for a number of other European manufacturers, including the Schramberger Majolika Fabrik (1928-30) and Christian Karstens Kommerz (1930-2) in Germany. Her design outlook in Germany displayed knowledge of contemporary modernist trends epitomized by the progressive outlook of the Deutscher Werkbund and the Bauhaus, both of which favoured clean, undecorated geometric forms. In 1932 Zeisel left for the USSR and worked in the Lomonosov State Porcelain Factory until 1934 and Dulevo Porcelain Factory (1934-6) and became art director of the China and Glass Industry of the Russian Republic. After her arrival in the USA in 1938 she taught at the Pratt Institute of Art, Brooklyn, and the Rhode Island School of Design. She soon attracted particular critical attention with her designs in 1942-3 for her Museum dinnerware designs, resulting from a collaboration between Castleton China and the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York. Its clean shapes and elegant forms of reflected the best of European Modernism between the wars. However, the range was unable to be put into mass production until 1946 when it was launched in a special exhibition at MOMA. Amongst other early ceramic designs in America was the less formal and biomorphic Town and Country dinnerware (1945) for Red Wing Pottery, in tune with much immediate post-war organic design by designers such as Russell Wright, Isamu Noguchi, and Charles and Ray Eames. Her designs for Tomorrows's Classic (1949-50), later manufactured by Hall China, proved a commercial success. Zeisel also designed in other media, ranging from metal cookware for General Mills to a chromium-plated portable chair, the prototype of which was designed in the late 1940s. However, it was never put into mass production, despite being shown to critical acclaim at the Milan Triennale of 1964. During her career many companies including Sears Roebuck in the United States, Rosenthal in Germany, Mancioli in Italy, Noritake in Japan, and Zsolnay in Hungary commissioned Zeisel for designs in different media. In 1983 she received a grant from the USA's National Endowment for the Arts and returned to Hungary and, in the following year a retrospective of her work entitled Eva Zeisel: Designer for Industry began to tour internationally.

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Wikipedia: Eva Zeisel
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Eva Zeisel
Born November 13, 1906 (1906-11-13) (age 102)
Hungary
Occupation Industrial designer

Eva Zeisel (born Eva Amalia Stricker,[1] November 13, 1906) is a Hungarian industrial designer known for her work with ceramics, primarily from the period after she immigrated to the United States. Her forms are often abstractions of the natural world and human relationships.[2] Work from throughout her prodigious career is included in important museum collections across the world. Zeisel declares herself a "maker of useful things."[3]. Zeisel currently resides in New York where she continues to design furniture as well as glass and ceramic objects.

Contents

Biography

She was born in Budapest, Hungary in 1906 to a wealthy, highly educated assimilated Jewish family. Her mother, Laura Polanyi Stricker, a historian, was the first woman to graduate from the University of Budapest. Her work on Captain John Smith's adventures in Hungary added fundamentally to our understanding and appreciation of his reliability as a narrator. Laura's brothers, Karl Polanyi, the sociologist and economist, and Michael Polanyi, the physical chemist and philosopher of science, are also extremely well known. Despite her family's intellectual prominence in the sciences, Eva Stricker was always interested in the arts. At 17, Zeisel entered Kepzomuveszeti Academia (the Budapest Royal Academy of Fine Arts). [1] Originally, she hoped to become a painter but eventually decided to pursue a more practical profession and apprenticed herself to the guild of potters. She left the academy in 1925 to work with a potter in Budapest learning to design and make ceramic objects. [4] She was the first woman to learn the craft and, after mastering the basics of ceramic manufacture, applied for work with German ceramic manufacturers. In 1928 Eva Stricker became the designer for the Schramberger Majolikafabrik in the Black Forest region of Germany where she worked for about two years creating many designs for tea sets, vases, inkwells and other ceramic items. Her designs at Schramberg were largely based on geometry and were clearly influenced by the Bauhaus design school in Weimar and later Dessau.

In 1932 Eva Striker decided to join her brother, Michael, a patent attorney, who was working in the Soviet Union as a foreign expert at the invitation of Joseph Stalin. In 1935, at the age of 29, after working several jobs in the ceramic industry—inspecting factories in the Ukraine as well as designing for the Lomonosov factory—Zeisel was named the artistic director of the Soviet ceramics industry. [4] It was only a year later, in 1936, while living in Moscow Zeisel was accused of participating in an assassination plot against Stalin. Zeisel was arrested and held in prison for 16 months, 12 of which were spent in solitary confinement.[5] Zeisel was released and deported to Vienna, Austria. Her experiences in the Soviet prison form the basis for Darkness at Noon, the well known anti-Stalinist novel written by her childhood sweetheart, Arthur Koestler. It was while in Vienna that Zeisel met her husband Hans Zeisel. In 1938, shortly after her arrival and marriage, the Nazis invaded Vienna encouraging the couple to move to New York with only $64.00 to their name.[6]

Zeisel’s career in design continued to develop in the United States. In addition to designing for companies such as General Mills, Rosenthal China, Castelton China, Zeisel taught one of the first courses in industrial design at the Pratt Institute in New York. In 1946, Zeisel had the first one-woman show at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

Zeisel stopped designing for industry during the 1960’s and 1970’s, returning to work in the 1980’s. [7] Many of her recent designs have found the same success as her earlier designs. Zeisel’s recent designs have included a teakettle for Chantal, glasses for Nambe, a sink and bathtub for Signature, ceramics for KleinReid, a coffee table for Eva Zeisel Originals (later became available through Design Within Reach) as well as the designer of one of Crate and Barrel’s best selling dinner services. [6]

Career

Eva Zeisel’s designs are made for use. The inspiration for her sensuous forms often comes from the natural organic curves of the body, taking advantage of the softness of clay. Zeisel’s more organic approach to modernism most likely comes as a reaction to the Bauhaus aesthetics that were popular at the time of her early training. Her sense of form and color show influence from the Hungarian folk arts she grew up seeing. [6] All of Zeisel’s designs, whether it be her furniture, metal, glass or ceramic, are often made in sets or in relationship to other objects. Many of Zeisel’s designs nest together creating modular designs that also function to save space.

Zeisel describes her designs in a New York Sun article: “I don’t create angular things. I’m a more circular person—it’s more my character….even the air between my hands is round.” [8]

Her best known work includes the eccentric, biomorphic "Town and Country" line of dishes, produced by Red Wing Pottery, The "Tomorrow's Classic" and "Century" lines for Hallcraft, the "Museum" line from Castleton, which was exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), and the Tri-Tone line by Hall. In 1998, a limited run of reproduction Town and Country pieces was sold through MoMA. (Crate & Barrel currently is selling a new reproduction line called "Century" which includes many of the original "Century" pieces, along with a few of the "Tomorrow's Classic" pieces. Unlike the originals, these are claimed to be oven proof.)

Zeisel’s works are in the permanent collections of Bröhan Museum, Germany; the British Museum; The Victoria and Albert Museum, London; the Musée des Arts Decoratifs de Montreal; The Museum of Modern Art, New York, and the Brooklyn, Metropolitan, Dallas, Knoxville, Milwaukee. In 2005, Zeisel was awarded the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award for Lifetime Achievement. [1]

On December 10, 2006, The Mingei International Museum in Balboa Park, San Diego, opened a major centenary retrospective exhibit "Eva Zeisel: Extraordinary Designer at 100," showing her designs from Schramberg (1928) through to current designs for Nambe, Chantal, Eva Zeisel Originals and others (2006). The exhibit will ran until June 10, 2007.Mingei International Museum current exhibits retrieved 2007 April 10.

Her most current line of dinnerware is called "One-O-One" made by Royal Stafford and sold exclusively at Bloomingdale's.

External links

References

  1. ^ a b c The Eva Zeisel Forum; www.evazeisel.org
  2. ^ Thurman, Judith; Prolific; December 18, 2006, The New Yorker
  3. ^ Thurman, Judith; Prolific; December 18, 2006, The New Yorker
  4. ^ a b Matchan, Linda; At 98, Ziesel’s Design Influence Comes Full Circle; June 23, 2005, The Boston Globe
  5. ^ Thurman, Judith; Prolific; December 18, 2006, The New Yorker
  6. ^ a b c McGee, Celia; Eva’s Ardor; Departures Magazine; March 2007
  7. ^ Traubman, Eleanor; Meeting Eva Zeisel; January 13, 2007, http://creativetimes.blogspot.com/2007/01/meeting-eva-zeisel.html
  8. ^ Herrup, Katharine; A Potter, a Pioneer, A Candlestick Maker; The New York Sun, At Home Section, March 3, 2007

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Modern Design Dictionary. A Dictionary of Modern Design. Copyright © 2004, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Eva Zeisel" Read more