Verlag: New York 2020, 2020
Anbieter: ART CONSULTING:SCANDINAVIA, Books on Art, Calabasas, CA, USA
Edwin and Mary Scheier began producing ceramics shortly after getting married in 1937. Recognition of EdwinÆs large decorative vessels and MaryÆs elegant functional ware came quickly, and by the 1950s the Scheiers had established themselves as leading American ceramic artists. This portfolio contains four photographs by collector/photographer Robert Mapplethorpe of ceramics from the 1950s through the 1980s and 4 photographs by Eeva-Inkeri of two paintings, a woven hanging and a sculpture, a total of 4 pages of text and the 8 loose photographs in a custom made portfolio with a Scheier work on the cover in black and white. A short biography provides details of the ScheiersÆ training, their work as art professors at the University of New Hampshire and their relocation to Mexico in the 1960s, along with information on exhibitions and awards., English, Year2020, Illust. B/W12, Illust. Color, ISBN , Code 7187. Softbound, In Pristine Condition, Bio. Pages 13, Size 8öx 10 1/2ö.
Paperback. Zustand: New.
Scheier, Edwin and Mary (illustrator). Scheier, Edwin and Mary. BOWL. Pottery with sgrafitto and glaze decoration, New Hampshire, mid-20th Century. Signed "Scheier" on the base. A small foot flares gracefully upward into a deep, wide bowl, glazed inside and out in a mottled green-red/brown-tan glossy finish, with the exterior decorated with figural forms of fish and animals in a shallow sgrafitto, with a more subtle effect than usually seen in Scheier pieces. 6 iches high, 7 1/4 inches diameter. With great presence and elegance in both the potting and the decoration. In excellent condition: no cracks, chips, dings, flakes or other defects. Edwin Scheier (1910-2008) and Mary Goldsmith Scheier (1908-2007) met while working with the WPA during the Depression. They married in 1937, worked at first as itinerant puppeteers, and opened their first pottery workshop in Virginia in 1939, and moved to New Hampshire in 1940, where they taught for more than 20 years at the University of New Hampshire. In the 1960s, they moved to Oaxaca, Mexico, where their work was influenced by religious and philosophical themes they found in the culture there. In their collaboration, Mary, skilled at creating thin walled thrown vessls and plates, made the pottery, and Edwin developed the glazes and carved the decorations, either as sculpted reliefs or as incised sgrafitto. Sadly, Mary had to stop making pottery in the 1960s because of arthritis and other health problems. The couple retired to Arizona and lived there until their deaths.
Scheier, Edwin and Mary (illustrator). Scheier, Edwin and Mary. PLATE. Pottery with sgrafitto and glaze decoration, New Hampshire, mid-20th Century. Signed "Scheier" on the base. 8 1/2 inch diameter, with a 1 1/4 inch wide rim, and with the 6 inch diameter decorated center depressed about 1 inch below the rim. A sgrafitto design of faces and a bird, with brown, blue and black glazes characteristic of early Scheier pieces. In excellent condition: no cracks, chips, dings, flakes or other defects. Edwin Scheier (1910-2008) and Mary Goldsmith Scheier (1908-2007) met while working with the WPA during the Depression. They married in 1937, worked at first as itinerant puppeteers, and opened their first pottery workshop in Virginia in 1939, and moved to New Hampshire in 1940, where they taught for more than 20 years at the University of New Hampshire. In the 1960s, they moved to Oaxaca, Mexico, where their work was influenced by religious and philosophical themes they found in the culture there. In their collaboration, Mary, skilled at creating thin walled thrown vessls and plates, made the pottery, and Edwin developed the glazes and carved the decorations, either as sculpted reliefs or as incised sgrafitto. Sadly, Mary had to stop making pottery in the 1960s because of arthritis and other health problems. The couple retired to Arizona and lived there until their deaths.