Null SANG DE BOEUF BOTTLE VASE, CHING PERIOD, FIRST HALF 19TH CENTURY.
Porcelain…
Descripción

SANG DE BOEUF BOTTLE VASE, CHING PERIOD, FIRST HALF 19TH CENTURY. Porcelain with Sang Du Boeuf enamel. It has a star-shaped crack on the mouth. 21 x 12.5 cm.

235 

SANG DE BOEUF BOTTLE VASE, CHING PERIOD, FIRST HALF 19TH CENTURY. Porcelain with Sang Du Boeuf enamel. It has a star-shaped crack on the mouth. 21 x 12.5 cm.

Las pujas estan cerradas para este lote. Ver los resultados

Podría interesarle

HANS J. WEGNER (Denmark, 1914 - 2007) for JOHANNES HANSEN. "Peacock chair, model JG-550, first period, 1970s. Solid ash frame and teak armrests. Wicker seat. In perfect condition. With publisher's stamp. Measurements: 106/36 cm. The Peacock chair was originally produced by Johannes Hansen (this being the case of the piece we are now bidding for, dating from the 1970s), but is currently produced by PP Møbler under model number PP550. It was never mass-produced during Wegner's lifetime and only a few were produced by Johannes Hansen. In terms of design, the Peacock chair borrows its morphology from the traditional English Windsor chair. When designer Finn Juhl first saw the chair's characteristic flat-axis backrest, it reminded him of a peacock's tail and he named it the Peacock Chair. Wegner also experimented with an upholstered version of the chair and exhibited it at the 1953 Cabinetmakers' Guild Exhibition. Hans J. Wegner was a leading figure in furniture design, whose ideas contributed to the international popularity of Danish design in the mid-20th century. His work belongs to the modern school, characterised by a special emphasis on functionality. Throughout his career, this designer was awarded prizes such as the Lunning Prize in 1951, the Grand Prix de Milan at the Milan Triennale of the same year, the Prince Eugene Medal in Sweden and the Danish Exkersberg Medal. In 1959 he was appointed honorary royal designer for industry by the Royal Society of Arts in London. His designs are currently included in collections such as those of the MoMA in New York and Die Neue Samlung in Munich.

PREBEN FABRICIUS (Denmark, 1931 - 1984) for KNOLL. 'Conversation chairs', model 710. Designed in 1972. Dark chrome-plated steel frame, loose cushions upholstered in black leather. Armrests with leather accents. Interior upholstery with logo. Made in Walter Knoll, with manufacturer's labels. Measurements: 78 x 72 x 78 cm. Seat height 42 cm. Small marks of use. Preben Juul Fabricius trained as a cabinetmaker with master carpenter Niels Vodder and also studied at the School of Interior Design with Finn Juhl in the mid-1950s. There he also met cabinetmaker Jørgen Kastholm, who would later become his long-time partner. The two shared a common vision of furniture design, based on minimalism and quality and inspired by the creations of Charles Eames and Mies van der Rohe. They were looking for an ideal that was timeless in its simplicity. In 1961 they set up a studio together in Gentofte, and four years later they presented their first designs at the Fredericia furniture fair, where they attracted the attention of the German furniture manufacturer Alfred Kill. The latter offered them a lucrative contract that allowed them to work freely, so Kastholm and Fabricius moved to Stuttgart with their first designs to start production in Kill's factory. Soon after, they made the international breakthrough at the 1966 Cologne fair, where they showed a complete series of home and office furniture developed from ten of their original designs. The two designers worked together between 1961 and 1968, a seven-year period in which they produced numerous designs that are now considered classics, such as the FK 6725 Tulip Chair, the FK 87 Grasshopper and the Scimitar. During this period, their furniture was also part of important international exhibitions, held at such prominent centers as the MOMA in New York (1967) and the Musée d'Art Moderne in Paris (1967). Today, Kastholm and Fabricius' designs can be seen at the MACBA in Barcelona, the MOMA in New York, the Musée d'Art Moderne in Paris, the Ringling Museum in Florida, the Art Museum in Brasilia, the Design Center in Stuttgart, the Haus Industriform in Essen, the Neue Sammlung in Munich, the Staatsgemäldesammlung Bayer in Munich, the Kunstindustrimuseum in Berlin, the Kunststofmuseum in Düsseldorf, the World Import Mart Museum and the History + Folkways Museum in Japan and the Museum für Angewandte Kunstgeschichte in Cologne.

NICOLAS MORIN (1959). Blown glass vase, 1997. Signed and dated on the base. Measurements: 14 x 16 x 16 cm. Nicolas Morin began working with glass in the family workshop in 1973. He traveled to Holland and Scandinavia in 1980, 81 and 82, where he had numerous contacts with glass artists (Wilhem Heessen, Sybren Valkema, Asa Brandt, Ulla Forsell, Ann Wolf, Wilke Adolfson, Monika Guggisberg and Philipp Baldwin, etc). He participated in the first International Symposium of Glass in France, in Sars Poteries, in 1982. He graduated from the School of Architecture of Marseille Luminy in 1984. He participated in the symposium "Art Verre Vin" in Saint Emilion 1984. He traveled to the United States in 1986. Exhibited at the "West Springfield Craft Fair". Collaborated with William Morris and Dale Chihuly in 1986. Held his first solo exhibition in Paris in 1987. He traveled to Scandinavia in 1992, where he visited in particular Finn Lingaard and Mikko Merikallio and Estonia to meet Vivii Ann Kerdo and Kaï Koppel, the first independent workshop in Eastern Europe. Participated in the International Symposium of blown glass in L'viv (UKR-1992) discovery of the Slavic part of the world of glass with the help of Catherine Sintès - Creation of a new line of sculptures with Catherine Sintès. Participated in the International Glassblowing Symposium of L'viv (UKR-1995). Participated in the Glass Symposium in Haapsalu (EST) in 2003, meetings with glass artists from the Baltic countries and the International Symposium of blown glass in L'viv (UKR-2004). He traveled to Japan with the presentation of Yoko Kuramoto and Makoto Ito in February 2005. He participated in the International Festival of Glass Stourbridge (UK, summer 2008).