French Ceramics
The ceramic industry in France underwent a radical transformation in the final decades of the nineteenth century. Determined that pottery vessels should be regarded as true works of art, a group of avant-garde ceramicists evolved their craft into an intellectual and emotional endeavor. This “rebirth” in ceramics developed in reaction to a period of historicism that preceded it, and its pioneers were Ernest Chaplet, Théodore Deck, Jean Carriès, and Auguste Delaherche, revolutionary artist-potters who embraced artisanal traditions while pursuing lost techniques through exhaustive experimentation. Rejecting what they viewed as an excessive and improper use of ornament, they celebrated the simplicity and sincerity of their medium, following the tenets of the
Art Nouveau
style sweeping Europe. Based on the principles of the British
Arts and Crafts movement
, Art Nouveau artists sought to reform the decorative arts by emphasizing uniqueness and a return to craftsmanship. The ceramicists typically worked in a designated “art pottery,” either in their own small-scale studios or in an independently run branch of a larger company. Many artist-potters found inspiration in Asian ceramics, particularly
Japanese stoneware
(a hard, dense type of pottery), which was shown in 1878 at the Exposition Universelle in Paris, as well as in the forms, glazes, and techniques of
Chinese porcelain
and pottery. They also looked to European traditions such as the rustic salt-glazed stoneware of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and
Gothic sculpture
and architecture. In the process, they created works of ceramic art that were entirely modern and new.
Joseph-Théodore Deck (1823–1891) was among the earliest of the French art potters. His small-scale manufactory, which specialized in artistic
faience
(tin-glazed earthenware), achieved success by producing ceramics in the popular styles of the day—East Asian, Neo-Renaissance, and Turkish Iznik (
1985.225
). Deck’s innovative use of color and his developments in glazes, including the distinctive turquoise glaze that bears his name, “bleu de Deck,” made him a leader in the avant-garde ceramic art renaissance of the late nineteenth century (
1993.313
). The
etcher
and designer Félix Bracquemond (1833–1914) worked briefly in Deck’s studio in the 1860s. Bracquemond was influential in bringing the Japanese style to
French decorative arts
; his contributions to
japonisme
include ceramic designs with imagery borrowed from
Japanese prints
(
1996.161.3
). A later generation of ceramicists emerged from the “Deck school,” including Edmond Lachenal (1855–1948), who was hired by Deck as an apprentice at age fifteen and became an important art potter in his own right (
2013.239.24
), and later Lachenal’s pupil Émile Decoeur (1876–1953), who became a prominent ceramicist in post-World War I France.
Considered the father of French art pottery, Ernest Chaplet (1835–1909) played an influential role in nearly all genres of the movement. After apprenticing at
Sèvres
, Chaplet worked at the Laurin factory in Bourg-la-Reine, where he developed barbotine ware—a pottery akin to
Impressionist
painting. In 1875, he joined the Haviland workshop at Auteuil, and in 1881 he was appointed director of the Haviland studio on the rue Blomet in Paris, where he made rustic brown stoneware and frequently collaborated with Albert-Louis Dammouse (1848–1926) and his brother Édouard-Alexandre Dammouse (1850–1903) (
2013.473
). While at Haviland in the early 1880s, Chaplet learned how to make the desirable but technically difficult Chinese sang de boeuf (oxblood) glaze, for which he would later win a medal at the 1889 Paris Exposition Universelle (
2013.477
). Chaplet sold the rue Blomet studio in 1887 and moved to Choisy-le-Roi, where he worked as an independent art potter, focusing on Chinese-inspired porcelain with high-fire “flambé” glazes (
2013.478
). After losing his sight in 1904, Chaplet left his studio to his son-in-law Émile Lenoble (1875–1940), who developed his own style of ceramics during the
Art Deco period
.
Called the “poet of stoneware,” Auguste Delaherche (1857–1940) was a leading figure in France’s ceramic renaissance. Delaherche was born in Beauvais, where he showed an early interest in the arts. He began his career in ceramics in 1883 working for a company that produced inexpensive utilitarian wares. In 1887, he acquired Ernest Chaplet’s Haviland studio in Paris, where he focused on artistic stoneware inspired by Asian ceramics. He moved to Armentières in 1894 to work quietly in the countryside. Known for his minimalist style and beautiful glazes, Delaherche was one of the most important, and most famous, fin-de-siècle ceramicists (
Jean-Joseph Carriès (1855–1894) was born in Lyon to a poor family and orphaned at the age of six. A visionary, he achieved prominence as a sculptor before turning to ceramics. His work included Japanese-style stoneware vessels, Gothic-inspired sculptural ceramics, and
Paul Gauguin
(1848–1903), tried their own hand at ceramics. Gauguin’s earliest ceramics were made in collaboration with Ernest Chaplet, whom he had met through Félix Bracquemond. Gauguin eventually developed his own technique of hand-sculpting the clay without the use of a potter’s wheel. Thinking the medium a pure form for artistic expression, he regarded his ceramic creations as “sculptures”



source: http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/fapot/hd_fapot.htm
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