Two ivory corved figures by Ferdinand Preiss
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Two ivory corved figures 1900

Ferdinand Preiss

MarbleBoneStoneIvory
Price on request

Bob J. Shimanovich Kunsthandel

  • About the artist

    Johann Philipp Ferdinand Preiss was born on the 13th of February in 1882. He was born in a German town called Erbach im Odenwald.

    At the age of 15 years old, Preiss lost his parents, one shortly after the other, and Preiss and his 5 siblings were looked after by friends and relatives.
    Ferdinand lived with the family of the then famous ivory carver Philipp Willmann, where he was trained to be an ivory carver.

    In 1901 he left Willmann’s workshop and travelled to Mailand, Rome and Paris. He earned his living as a modeller.

    In Baden-Baden he got to know Arthur Kassler who became his companion. With him he founded the company Preiss & Kassler, an ivory-carving business with a workshop in Berlin. In 1907 he married a Berliner, Margarethe Hilme. Soon afterwards his son Harry and his daughter Lucie were born. At first, the model collection of the new company consisted of small ivory carvings, including statuettes of children and carvings whose motifs were mostly oriented towards classical ideals.

    From 1910 onwards the first carvings which combined bronze with ivory were produced. The casting was done by the company Gladenbeck in Berlin. By the time the First World War broke out in 1914 the company had brought the number of employees up to six; all were outstanding ivory carvers from Erbach. Immediately after the end of the war Preiss and Kassler built up the business again which would reach full bloom during the 1920s. Preiss was the artistic director whereas Kassler devoted himself to the commercial side of the business.

    Their speciality was Art Deco cabinet sculptures which combined ivory with painted bronze and which were mounted on plinths made of onyx or marble and sometimes also on mantelpiece clocks or lampstands. The models, which were practically all designed by Ferdinand Preiss, were produced in limited editions. A large proportion of the production was exported to England and the USA. The company Preiss & Kassler existed until 1943.

    The workshop with the stock of samples in Ritterstraße in Berlin completely burned down in 1945 just before the end of the war during a bomb attack. Ferdinand Preiss is regarded as one of the leading ivory carvers of the 1920s and 1930s and his skill, detailing and modelling in this medium was unsurpassed in the Art Deco era. His stunning young ladies captured the energy and seduction of the Period and his models of children are exquisite. His ivory carvings are amongst the most valuable in the world.

    Ferdinand Preiss died on the 29th of July in 1943. He was 61 years old and died of a brain tumor.

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