Hans Coper - The Art of Fire: Selections from the Dr John P. Driscoll Collection London Wednesday, November 10, 2021 | Phillips

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  • 來源

    Jane Coper 收藏
    繼承自上述來源
    騎士橋,邦瀚斯,1993 年 3 月 25 日,拍品編號 176

  • 過往展覽

    'Hans Coper', Babcock Galleries, New York, 15 November 1994-7 January 1995
    'Ceramic Modernism: Hans Coper, Lucie Rie and Their Legacy', Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art, Toronto, 25 May-2 September 2002

  • 文學

    Hans Coper, exh. cat., Babcock Galleries, New York, 1994, illustrated, n.p.

  • 藝術家簡介

    漢斯.考柏

    German • 1920 - 1981

    Hans Coper learned his craft in the London studio of Lucie Rie, having emigrated from Germany as a young Jewish engineering student in 1939. He initially assisted Rie in the studio with the ceramic buttons she made for the fashion industry, as well as ceramic tableware, but soon Coper was producing his own work. By 1951 he had received considerable recognition exhibiting his pots in the "Festival of Britain." 

     

    Coper favored compound shapes that, while simple in appearance, were in fact complex in construction. Similar to the making of Joseon Dynasty Moon Jars (Rie in fact displayed a Moon Jar in the studio), he would build his vessels by bringing several thrown forms together, for example joining bowls rim to rim. Coper eschewed glazes and preferred the textured surfaces achieved through the application of white and black slips, evoking the abraded texture of excavated vessels. This interest in ancient objects was very much in step with other modernists of his time—Coper admired Constantin Brancusi and Alberto Giacometti and his textured markings have been compared to sculptors such as William Turnbull.

     

    In the last phase of his career, Coper reduced the scale of his work creating small "Cycladic" pots that stood on pedestals or drums, recalling the clay figures of Bronze Age Greece. 

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79

《「薊」形態》

約1965年作
石器 錳釉
18.5 x 14.5 x 5 公分 (7 1/4 x 5 3/4 x 1 7/8 英吋)
鈴印:藝術家

估價
£20,000 - 30,000 ‡♠

成交價£100,800

The Art of Fire: Selections from the Dr John P. Driscoll Collection

London Auction in association with Maak