Fougères 1905
Louis Majorelle
Ceramic
27 ⨯ 10 ⨯ 10 cm
€ 3.450
Het Ware Huis
- About the artworkZeldzame vaas van Louis Majorelle, uitgevoerd door Mougin in steengoed. De vaas heet Fougères, en we zien de bladeren van een tongvaren en op de voet van de vaas zit een slak met een slakkenhuis op zijn rug. We zien hier de liefde voor de natuur die zo voelbaar is in de Art nouveau van de Ecole de Nancy. De laatste foto stamt uit de originele catalogus van Majorelle, we zien hoe de vaas op een Majorelle tafeltje staat en hoe hij gebruikt wordt.
- About the artistLouis Majorelle was born the 26th of September in 1859.
He was a French decorator and furniture designer who produced his own designs.
He followed the French tradition of the ébéniste. He was one of the outstanding designers of furniture in the Art Nouveau style, and after 1901 formally served as one of the vice-presidents of the École de Nancy.
After having taken Théodor Devilly’s and Charles Pêtre’s classes at the Nancy Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Louis Majorelle was admitted to the Paris Ecole des Beaux-Arts in 1877 in the studio of painter Aimé Millet. Two years later, the death of his father required him to return to Nancy. With the help of his brother Jules, he took over the family furniture and faience business.
In 1894, after an historically inspired production, Louis Majorelle replaced the varnished and painted technique of the rococo and Japanese styled furniture in favor of an inlaid décor with naturalist and symbolist references. Acknowledged for his cabinetry, Louis Majorelle developed two levels of furniture production: the first concerned luxury furniture, fabricated in Nancy on Rue du Vieil Aître, and the second included the less expensive and mass produced furniture produced from 1905 onwards in the workshops of Pierre Majorelle in Bouxières, close to Nancy. Metalwork was developed in the workshops to create decorative bronze elements for furniture as well as the light fixtures that Majorelle collaborated with Daum since 1898. He had his ceramics produced within different Lorraine workshops and designed models of stoneware ojects for Alphonse Cytère (Rambervillers) and the Mougin brothers. His various activities lead him to open numerous exhibition stores, notably in Paris, Lyon, and Lille.
In 1901, he was the vice president of the Ecole de Nancy.
Louis Majorelle died on the 15th of January 1926.
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