Faces and Flowers: Painting on Lenox China


Faces and Flowers: Painting on Lenox China

August 22, 2009, to January 30, 2010

Mint Museum of Art 

 

Bruno Geyer (Austrian, active late 19th - early 20th centuries)

Ceramic Art Company, for Tiffany and Company, New York

After "Self Portrait" by Angelica Kauffmann, circa 1904

bone china with enamel decoration and gold pastework

 

Faces and Flowers:  Painting on Lenox China displays more than 70 objects from the late 19th to early 20th century. These works were created while the company was known as Ceramic Art Company, owned and operated by Walter Scott Lenox himself.  Lenox allowed his artists, some of the best in both America and Europe, to focus on quality rather than quantity.  This superb quality was recognized by the White House, as Lenox China became the first American china to be used by the Presidents.

 

Interview from The Magazine Antiques

      Read the interview with Brian Gallagher, Curator of Decorative Arts at the Mint, and Ellen Decker, curator of the exhibition, conducted by Caroline Hannah of Antiques magazine and available from their web site.

 

History and Exhibition Information

 

More about Lenox 

 

Featured Artists 

 

Selected Resources from The Mint Museum Library 

 

Special Feature: From the Stacks

     The artist Simon Lissim worked in stage and costume design, painted, illustrated children's books, and taught art as well as being a porcelain designer. In The Mint Museum Library, one of the books we have on Lissim is the limited edition Simon Lissim published in 1933 in Paris by Editions du Cygne. Below are some of the wonderful illustrations of Lissim's work from the book.

 

   

     Clockwise from top left:  Assiette (1927); Le Bonheur d'etre riche (1925); Projet de tissu (1926; Les trois      Boyards (1927)

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Created by Maisie McParland, intern at The Mint Museum Library