Bronze Age Gold from Wales

Vase, earthenware, double gourd shape with ovoid body and tall neck swelling towards the top and turned in at the rim, glazed outside in matt black, inside with a white glaze over a green glaze.

The double-gourd shape of this vase and its matt black glaze are influenced by Chinese ceramics. The simplicity of the form and the muted colouring reflect the modernist design principles learned by Marks at the Bauhaus School of Arts in Weimer in 1920-21. Born Margarete Heymann in Cologne, Grete Marks (1899-1990) set up the Haël Workshops for Artistic Ceramics in 1923 and achieved success through a firm commitment to progressive design. Persecuted as a Jew by the Nazis, she was forced to sell her factory in 1935 and escaped to Britain, where she worked for a time in the Staffordshire potteries.

(We are not able to provide an image for this item at this time. This is either due to copyright restrictions, or because the item is awaiting digitisation. We apologise for any inconvenience.)

Collection Area

Art

Item Number

NMW A 38280

Creation/Production

1899-1990; née Margarete Heymann, later married names Loebenstein and Marks
Role: Production
Role: Designer
Role: Production
Role: Factory
Place: Marwitz, Germany
Period: 1923-1932

Acquisition

Gift, 5/7/2006

Measurements

Height (cm): 27.3
diam (cm): 12.4
Height (in): 10
diam (in): 4

Techniques

Slip-cast
Forming
Applied Art
Glazed
Decoration
Applied Art

Material

Earthenware

Location

On Display

Collections Online is updated regularly, but please confirm that an object remains on display before making a special visit.

Comments are currently unavailable. We apologise for the inconvenience.