Sauceboat and underplate (American Modern Dinnerware)

Description

An ardent promoter of modern design, Russel Wright developed his American Modern line of dinnerware in 1937, which included serving pieces such as this sauceboat. Wright claimed that the organic shapes of the pattern reflected each piece’s function, and that muted colors such as seafoam blue were used in order to “dramatize” the service of food. Although Wright designed the line in 1937, American Modern was not produced until 1939, because of the skepticism of potential manufacturers during the Great Depression. Nonetheless, it has proved to be one of the most popular ceramic patterns ever created.

Provenance

Beryl C. Michels (1923-2015; born Beryl Cohn), Chicago then West Hartford, CT, from c. 1947–52 [according to Committee on American Arts minutes, Oct. 12, 1995; incoming receipt, RX20946, Sept. 26, 1995; copy in curatorial object file]; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1995.

Sauceboat and underplate (American Modern Dinnerware)

Russel Wright

1937–59

Accession Number

142414

Medium

Earthenware and glaze

Dimensions

Sauce boat: 6.4 × 22.9 × 16.5 cm (2 1/2 × 9 × 6 1/2 in.); Underplate: 2.5 × 27.6 × 15.9 cm (1 × 10 7/8 × 6 1/4 in.)

Classification

vessel for serving food

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Beryl C. Michels