|
















GO TO:
Art
Pottery (American and European art
pottery other than mid century items)
Pottery
and Porcelain (Figurines, plates,
vases, etc.)
West
German Pottery (Mid Century pottery,
currently featuring one of the best selections of studio and
W. German pottery in the U.S.)
Studio
Pottery (While many of these items
can be found in other categories, they are also gathered here
for those with a special interest in studio work.)
Glass (art glass, stemware, EAPG, Depression, Elegant,
etc.)
Metalware (Various metal items and misc. vases, inkwells, etc.)
Paintings (oils, watercolors, prints, 19th and 20th century
American and European)
Links
Pages About Us
Meet the
Gin and the For
Meet the "staff"
The Cor-purr-ate
Story (Glyph's Rise to Power)
Contact
Information (Phone, etc.)
Essays and Information:
Book Review: Fat
Lava, West German Ceramics of the 1960s & 70s
Collecting
West German Pottery: Thoughts, Philosophy, and History
A Divine
and Delightful Madness: An Intro to W. German Pottery
Learning
the Basics about West German Pottery (This
is the most in depth essay.)
West
German Pottery Marks
W.
German Companies, Designers, and Studio Potters
West
German Picture Gallery and Identification
Aid (pictures of items we've had over the last 3 years)
To Buy or
Not To
Buy: Going Where Price Guides
End (thoughts about collecting, aesthetics, and health)
Get the
Picture Straight: The Basics of Selling
Glass and Pottery on the Internet (how to write item listings,
matters of photography, etc.)
E-MAIL
US
Ginfor's Odditiques (click
to
return "home")
Pedagogy,
Philosophy and Nonsense (my "other"
site: writing, learning, and odd ideas like long hair and fairy
god-princesses)



|
GinFor's
Odditiques
(GINny and FORrest Poston's
Oddities and Antiques)

|
Collecting West German Pottery: Thoughts, Philosophy, and
History by Forrest D.
Poston
The thought for the day in the Oprah newsletter for February
6, 2006 read, "Your home should replenish your senses and
feed your soul." Few companies or even eras offer as many
ways to achieve that goal as does West German pottery. The forms
and glazes on West German pottery are fascinating enough, but
when you consider the soil from which such vitality and whimsy
grew, the story takes on another dimension.
Work backwards through history and we have
the economic struggles and political tensions of the 1970's,
the cold war of the 1960's and 1950's. We have WWII, the Nazi
repressions, and for Germany and much of Europe, the slow recovery
from WWI. That takes us to the time of the Bauhaus school, one
of the most influential design schools of all time, an enduring,
worldwide influence currently visible in Jonathan Adler's designs.
The Bauhaus school represented modern, forward thinking, not
exactly something the Nazi party favored. The pottery portion
of the school closed in 1925, followed by the rest of the school
in the early 30's. Energy and resources were soon poured into
the war, but the end result was psychological, emotional and
physical rubble. Surely any art that could grow from such soil
would echo Edvard Munch's The Scream.
Instead, there came forms such as Ruscha's
shape 313 designed by Kurt Tschörner, elegance mixed with
exaggeration, perfect proportions that please the eye and tickle
the senses. Decorations ranged from cute mixed with innocence
to geometric designs that somehow mixed a sense of challenge
with a sense of humor. It certainly made marketing sense. Instead
of Calgon, it was "Pottery, take me away."
Through the 1950's and into the early 60's,
the most popular designs echoed the Art Deco period, particularly
the vitality of that era plus the insistent innocence that later
infused "Happy Days". However, unlike the angular,
geometric forms of the Art Deco period, many of the early West
German forms featured gentle curves, just not quite where you
expected to find them. While some forms maintained a classic
look, asymmetry gave others the look of caricature.
From around 1965 into the mid 70's, forms
and colors grew more exaggerated and more intense without losing
that fine sense of proportion and whimsy. In a paradox typical
of this pottery, soothing earthtone glazes were popular at the
same time, sometimes on the same piece with a vibrant orange
or other lively Pop Art shade. Lava glazes and other textural
elements added another level of variety and complexity.
Beginning in the early 70's, a weak economy
began to take its toll, and factories closed. By the mid 70's,
it was clear that the special drive that grew out of repression
was losing momentum, and one of the great eras in art pottery
was coming to a close. But the more I'm around the better pieces,
the more I believe that the spirit that enabled art and artists
to survive was poured into the pottery, and the vitality went
not only into a range of creativity possibly unmatched for breadth
and depth but into the designs and clay.
This art became not only the result of vitality
but about vitality, and that strength and energy come out in
the pottery even now, radiating into the room. Even the sense
of whimsy underlying so much of the art is about survival because
without the perspective supplied by humor survival becomes about
hardness, not hope.
Ways
to Collect West German Pottery
Some collectors have stumbled into the W.
German field by buying an item or two at the low-risk cost found
at yard sales or thrift shops. Others have seen some sweet items
available but can't quite decide to take the chance. Quite often
the question is, "where do I go from here?" What does
it mean to collect West German pottery? That's a big question
for a novice in any collecting category, but it's even bigger
when the field is virtually untraveled with no well-worn paths
to follow and no books acting as maps, not even a good idea of
what the choices are.
The beginning point is the same in any collecting
field: start according to your taste, budget, and experience.
As with any good philosophy, the idea is simple and straightforward.
It's the application that's hard. Budget is the easiest part
for most of us, those who consider the term extra money an oxymoron.
Still, just because we're broke doesn't mean we don't need beauty
around us.
Rule number one is buy the best you can afford.
Sometimes that means buying one really good piece, sometimes
buying two or three fairly good pieces. It also means don't go
wild and buy a bunch of poorly done pieces just for the sake
of quantity. Even though the most widely available items are
the tourist pieces, there are better and worse pieces even within
that category.
For inexperienced collectors, there's a sub-category
of vases with gold glazes that makes a good entry
point. Several companies did items with gold-highlighted glazes.
In this case, that means gold glaze, not just gold that's painted
on. A gold glaze can be rather tricky, so there's value in the
difficulty as well as the appearance.
Most of the vases in this category are relatively
small (3-6") and often have fairly traditional, classic
forms. Prices on these tend to be low, particularly compared
to the aesthetic value, and even when W. German items become
more widely known, many of the simple versions will stay within
relatively easy economic reach. However, there are also nicer
items within the category.
The potential value on the gold glazes is
based on form, glaze complexity, and size. The odd, exaggerated
forms represent the period and will generally be more prized
by mid-century collectors. Glazes with more complex, usually
abstract, patterns will also command a higher price. Collectors
of American art pottery will find some items reminiscent of Weller
Cloudburst.
Collectors in this field can work up from
fairly mass market items to the finer versions. Makers include
Bay and Carstens, but the Jaspatina glaze from Jasba is among
the best. Items over 8" appear to be uncommon, and glazes
combining red and gold among the most uncommon. Most of the gold-glazed
work dates from 1956 to the early 1960's.
While much of the W. German work is unusual
in form and decoration, collectors can often find connections
with other fields to bring a sense of familiarity that may help
collectors determine just where they're tastes and preferences
lie within the W. German field. For example, many W. German items
have archaic decorations and coloring that fit well with a southwestern
theme.
Even glass collectors will find connections,
especially those who collect Blenko or Pilgrim. The strong colors
and emphasis on large items will make those collectors feel right
at home. Collecting through such comparisons also opens intriguing
cross-collecting possibilities.
I've found that many collectors get a bit
fixated on a particular item or style, but playing glass off
of pottery or one style with another can create surprising combinations
with a feeling all their own. I know one collector who puts her
1970's Pop Art vases alongside her utilitarian crocks and is
delighted with the result. Perhaps the idea just brings out the
child in me, going back to happy hours spent combining blocks
in every combination possible and mixing in other toys just to
see what happened.
Several companies also used a motif that I call a
heartstripe, an irregular, horizontal band of contrasting color
around the center of the vase. These stripes are most often found
in orange or red, which suggests a vitality emanating from the
center. In some cases, the stripe is bound top and bottom by
a lava glaze that creates a geological look and opens numerous
philosophical readings for those so inclined. Scheurich, Carstens,
Steuler, and Hutschenreuther were particularly fond of this motif.
It's also possible to collect by shape or
glaze. Many of the shapes were produced for a fairly long period
and can be found in numerous glazes. Two particular examples
are Ruscha shape 313 (designed by Kurt Tschörner) and Scheurich
shape 271 (designed by Hans Siery). Both shapes are fairly easily
found, but coming up with all the glazes could be a lifetime
project. Ruscha 313 was produced for about 30 years and 50 or
so different glazes.
Perhaps the only way I don't suggest collecting
is by name. In W. German pottery, it's rather difficult anyway
since both the company and the designer are so often still unknown.
However, the real problem is that collecting by name has a tendency
to run up the cost without relationship to any real value. At
the moment, pieces attributed to Bodo Mans sell higher just because
of the name, and the ironic part is that this name value comes
from Mans' connection to France and Picasso, an odd reason
to buy German pottery.
Some of the Mans designs are certainly attractive,
but others are much less so, and there's serious doubt about
some of the attributions. On the other hand, I'm personally fond
of designs I've seen by Cari Zalloni, so there can certainly
be connections between collector and designer. The trick is to
always consider the piece, not just the name.
In some respects, collecting should be done
much like child raising, with a mix of freedom and control. A
good collection really is much like a living thing, growing in
often unexpected ways and sometimes needing to leave some things
behind. Fortunately, with a collection you can sell or give away
the items that no longer please you as they once did, a method
not generally approved of with children.
Still, you don't have to worry about getting
your collection "right". You will change, and so will
the collection and your relationship with it. Be willing to take
some chances (within the limits of your budget) and buy a piece
that speaks to you even though it doesn't seem to fit right now.
Even with the pieces you have at home, think
of them like the blocks you played with as a kid, moving them
around, always trying new arrangements just to see how the relationships
change. Try the soothing items in one room and the eye-poppers
in another, then try mixing them. You may be able to create a
sense of story depending on how items connect.
Most importantly, make sure that your collection
makes you happy. You should enjoy walking into the room more
because of the pottery. And be sure to slow down enough to let
the pottery speak. Let yourself be soothed by that gentle curve
or be revitalized by that orange heartstripe.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here are a few more pictures that reflect
styles mentioned. To see many more images, check out the galleries
of items we've had in the past beginning with the Bay
gallery or view our West German items currently for
sale.
  

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thanks to one and all.
Forrest (the "for" part of ginfor)
|
West German Images and Information
on Ginfor's Odditiques:
Sneak Peek at Kevin
Graham's Upcoming Book: Collecting
German Ceramics
West German Pottery
News
West German Pottery
Collectors Club
Book Review: Fat
Lava: West German Ceramics of the 1960s & 70s
Essay: Collecting
West German Pottery: Thoughts, Philosophy, and History
Essay: Reputation,
Reality, and Respect: Sorting Out West German Pottery
Essay : A
Divine and Delightful Madness: An Introduction to W. German Pottery
Identification:
West German Pottery Marks (Pictures of various marks, bases,
and labels)
Photo Gallery of West German items (pictures of items we've
had in the past few years, divided by company when possible).
Companies,
Potters, Designers (Information
about some of the particular companies, studio potters, and designers
active during the West German era.)
|
When asking questions:
1. It really, really helps if you send
pictures of the item and the bottom (e-mail or snail mail is
fine).
2. When sending pictures by e-mail, please
try to keep the file size down. A resolution of 72 ppi is fine
for viewing on a monitor.
3. If you get a message saying something
about the e-mail or picture being rejected (happened recently),
it's not us doing it. Too large a file or wrong file type is
the most likely problem.
While this information is free, it is
under copyright. We give permission for people to print a copy
for personal use. Of course, quoting is always fine as long as
proper credit is included. While we may eventually do a book,
any support for this part of the site is up to you. There's no
obligation, but if you feel like you got enough value out of
the essays, information, and pictures, we won't object if you
make a small donation though Paypal. The cats like to know that
we will be able to support them in the manner they have come
to expect.
Thanks to one and all.
Forrest (the "for" part of ginfor)
ginfor@earthlink.net
|
If you feel like the essays, information, and pictures were
worthwhile, and you would like to support this part of the site,
feel free to make a small donation through Paypal. It helps the
cats feel like they will continue to be treated in the manner
to which they have grown accustomed.
|