Eva Zeisel and Schramberg Majolica Factory
Vase
1928
Scroll
Physical Qualities
Glazed earthenware, Overall: 8 1/4 × 4 3/4 in. (21 × 12.1 cm.)
Credit Line
Mary Louise Gutman Bequest Fund
Object Number
2022.190
The career of Hungarian-born object and furniture designer Eva Zeisel spanned eight decades and included leading roles in workshops from Russia to the United States. This early black double-handled vase, which Zeisel made at her home studio in Budapest, Hungary, is a study of Hungarian black pottery, a technique that uses pine wood to fire clay under an airtight dirt mound. As a designer at the Schramberg Majolica Factory in Germany, Zeisel transformed the monochromatic color and simplified geometry of Hungarian black pottery into Cubist designs. The vibrant glazes of these Schramberg
factory works enhance Zeisel’s unconventionally placed vase handlesand resoundingly round platter.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by purchase, 2022; Estate of Eva Zeisel
Cone Wing Rotations 2023
Cone Wing Rotations 2024
Cone Wing Rotations 2025
Designer biography: http://www.dwr.com/category/designers/v-z/eva-zeisel.do
Moore, Pat. "Schramberger Majolikafabrik," Eva Zeisel: Life, Design, and Beauty. Ed. Pat Kirkham. San Francisco, 2013, pp. 46-51.
Moore, Pat. "Schramberger Majolikafabrik," Eva Zeisel: Life, Design, and Beauty. Ed. Pat Kirkham. San Francisco, 2013, pp. 46-51.
