Vase

Description

Inspired by the French earthenware at Chicago's 1893 World's Columbian Exposition, William H. Grueby established his own firm in Boston the following year. By 1900, under the direction of George Prentiss Kendrick, Grueby Faience Company specialized in producing earthenware in solid shapes based on Asian precedents in a small spectrum of matte colors with elegant applied decoration. The color, shape, and symmetrical arrangement of daffodils on this vase evoke Japanese elements that Kendrick would have recognized through his involvement with the Boston Society of Art and Crafts. The beauty of Kendrick's designs—along with the laborious handcrafting—made Grueby among the most popular pottery in the country. Unfortunately, Grueby's devotion to time-consuming applied decoration led to the company's demise.

Provenance

Jordan-Volpe Gallery, New York, by early 1980s; private collection, West Coast, US; Gregg Seibert, Bernardsville, NJ, c. 1999; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago with McClelland + Rachen, New York, as agent, 2008.

Vase

George Prentiss Kendrick

1903–9

Accession Number

195530

Medium

Earthenware and glaze

Dimensions

37.5 × 20.3 × 20.3 cm (14 3/4 × 8 × 8 in.)

Classification

vase

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Purchased with funds provided by the Antiquarian Society; through prior acquisition of the B. F. Ferguson Fund; Skinner Sales Proceeds Fund; Wesley M. Dixon Jr., and Roger and J. Peter McCormick Endowment; through prior acquisition of the Antiquarian Society; Goodman, Simeon B. Williams, Harriet A. Fox, and Wendel Fentress Ott Endowment; Highland Park Community Associates; Charles R. and Janice Feldstein Endowment Fund for Decorative Arts