Platter

Art Institute of Chicago

Platter

Designed by Félix Bracquemond (French, 1833–1914)

Date
c. 1874
Medium
Glazed earthenware and gilding
Culture
Paris
Department
Applied Arts of Europe
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

This monumental ceramic platter illustrates the interconnectedness of the fine and applied arts in France during the era of radical artistic innovation around 1870. It was created by Félix Bracquemond, a printmaker and designer who was deeply embedded in the Parisian avant-garde. The thickly modeled stoneware form is enameled with an arrestingly bright landscape in yellow, orange, red and green. At the center of the composition a vibrant, craggy mountain rises above an ominously dark waterfall. The boldly delineated landscape elements recall Japanese woodblock prints, which Bracquemond admired.

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Object type
AAT300386308

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