Brutalist Pitcher by Eugenia Meltzer

Vintage
US$195.00
Item number: 4526

This art pottery pitcher with its wonderfully assertive attitude was hand made by Alfred Station, New York potter Eugenia Frith Meltzer in 1996. Born in 1950 to a professor of ceramics father and a mother who was a ceramics artist, Mrs. Meltzer earned BA and Masters Degrees and then did her graduate study with famed potter Warren MacKenzie from 1973 to 1974. Her works are currently in several prestigious galleries and museums. She is one of the artists selected to be in the Allegany Artisans Studio Tour in October, 2018. Her signature is incised on the unglazed bottom of the pitcher "Eugenia Meltzer" and beneath that the date of 7. 1. 96. On the bottom rim is her cipher, the impressed letter M.


This pitcher is an excellent example of brutalist design. Some of the attributes of brutalism are rough surfaces, strong lines and a coarse, somewhat unfinished appearance---definitely not vanilla art. It's a term derived from the French word "brut," translating to 'raw, crude, unfinished.' This modernist pitcher stands 10 1/4 inches tall, measures 9 1/2 inches handle to spout, about 7 inches across the belly and has a 2 inch mouth. Made of heavy grey stoneware clay, it weighs four pounds and is in excellent condition.

At first glance, the pitcher appears to have a lava glaze but in fact much of the surface of the body was tooled with hundreds of tiny, indented geometric shapes. The twisted ribbon handle and the stubby spout seem to be "breaking through" to emerge from peeled-back layers. The entire piece was given a handsome chocolatey brown glaze. (White spots, as usual, are only light reflections.)

This art pottery pitcher, made by a talented and well-known artist, lends a compelling presence to any setting.

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PYH 4526