Saturday, February 9, 2008

Famous Swedish designer - LISA LARSON

Lisa Larson BulldogLisa Larson-Kalle
LISA LARSON is a famous Swedish designer who creates collectible artware in her home of Gustavsberg, Sweden. Each piece is a perfect example of her talent for characterization. She creates not only figures of various national origins but wonderful animals with their individual personalities. Her elegant objects d'art already appeal to several generations and are collectors items. She is also a designer for the well-known German porcelain companies of Rosenthal and Goebel Porzellan. Her works are represented in museums in both Scandinavia and abroad.
Lisa Larson Pottery-Cats
Lisa Larson Lilla Zoo Series-FoxSource

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Beate Kuhn - Pioneer German studio potter

Beate Kuhn - Pioneer German studio potter

Beate Kuhn is one of the most important German potters of our age.

The works of Beate Kuhn are known in the whole world. Her awards and honors are numerous. Beate Kuhn’s artistic work is characterized by her pottery: the potter’s wheel is her base tool. The sheer number of one-off pieces by the artist – more than 1,500, all bear her unmistakable and fascinating personal touch.

Already during her studies at the Werkkunstschule in Darmstadt, she designed elegant avant-garde vases and a jar for the Rosenthal porcelain factory’s studio-line . These are 1950s’ classics. Her first autonomous works are sculpted vessels, which reveal her fascination with the oeuvre of Joan Miró and Paul Klee.

Throwing pots on the wheel was to determine her whole oeuvre. Already in the 1950’s visitors to the International Expo in Frankfurt were delighted by her intensively colored and painted works. This is surprising, as painted vessels were not trendy at the time.
Beate Kuhn

In 1957 Beate Kuhn moved to Düdelsheim and set up her own workshop. The important German potters Karl and Ursula Scheid also live in her neighborhood. This time coincided with a change in her oeuvre. Since the early 1960’s Beate Kuhn has created freely designed sculptures, each piece consisting of individual thrown and cut elements, assembled into a whole. In each of her works, the artist confines herself where possible to a single basic element executed in different sizes, which are then all juxtaposed in serial fashion. By taking this step, Beate Kuhn became one of the first potters in Germany to abandon utilitarian work in favor of purely artistic work.

The Stiftung KERAMION is exhibiting a survey of Kuhn's oeuvre from the early 1950’s until today. The artist's animal sculptures, especially many depictions of cats, for which Beate Kuhn creates detailed sketches, show she is a very close observer of nature.
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