1996.187.1, "Biarritz" shape plate with No. 5948 pattern, c. 1933, designer: Clarice Cliff, manuf: Arthur J. Wilkinson Ltd, Royal Staffordshire Pottery, Burslem, England, Earthenware with painted decoration


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
The high modernist taste for streamlined shapes and spartan decoration is embodied in Clarice Cliff's designs of the 1930s. Her direct inspiration came from the work of French designer Jean Tetard, from whom Cliff took the idea for the very successful Stamford shape around 1930. In 1933, Cliff introduced another Tetard adaptation, the Biarritz shape, with its distinctive rectangular plates. Unfortunately, square plates with circular wells were extremely difficult to produce because the sides drooped if the plates were stacked conventionally in the kiln. Cliff devised a method of supporting the ware with sand and special kiln furniture, which solved the warping problem, but meant that far fewer pieces could be fired at one time. Consequently, the Biarritz line was expensive to produce and very little of it sold in America; only those pieces with simple, conservative decoration, such as these banded patterns, found a market in the United States, unlike the brightly colored versions inspired by peasant folk art designs that were popular in England.

Adapted from
  • Charles L. Venable, Ellen P. Denker, Katherine C. Grier, Stephen G. Harrison, China and Glass in America, 1880-1980: From Tabletop to TV Tray (New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 2000), 440, cat. 89.
  • DMA unpublished material, Label text [1996.187.1], transcribed 2017.

NOTES
  • updated provenance and geo x refs

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

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RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
Until 1996: Noble Pedler Antiques, Torrington, CT

From 1996: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from above [1]

[1] See receipt in Collections Records Object File [1996.187.1-2]

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General Description
 
The high modernist taste for streamlined shapes and spartan decoration is embodied in Clarice Cliff's designs of the 1930s. Her direct inspiration came from the work of French designer Jean Tetard, from whom Cliff took the idea for the very successful Stamford shape around 1930. In 1933, Cliff introduced another Tetard adaptation, the Biarritz shape, with its distinctive rectangular plates. Unfortunately, square plates with circular wells were extremely difficult to produce because the sides drooped if the plates were stacked conventionally in the kiln. Cliff devised a method of supporting the ware with sand and special kiln furniture, which solved the warping problem, but meant that far fewer pieces could be fired at one time. Consequently, the Biarritz line was expensive to produce and very little of it sold in America; only those pieces with simple, conservative decoration, such as these banded patterns, found a market in the United States, unlike the brightly colored versions inspired by peasant folk art designs that were popular in England.

Adapted from
  • Charles L. Venable, Ellen P. Denker, Katherine C. Grier, Stephen G. Harrison, China and Glass in America, 1880-1980: From Tabletop to TV Tray (New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 2000), 440, cat. 89.
  • DMA unpublished material, Label text [1996.187.1], transcribed 2017.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes
  • updated provenance and geo x refs

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
Until 1996: Noble Pedler Antiques, Torrington, CT

From 1996: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from above [1]

[1] See receipt in Collections Records Object File [1996.187.1-2]

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

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1996.187.1
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
@Bowling
ceramic (material): AAT: 300235507
%Archived
*Decorative Arts and Design
Streamlined Moderne: AAT: 300253564
squares (geometric figures): AAT: 300055637
modernist (European style): AAT: 300021474
plates (dishes): AAT: 300042991
Art Deco (style or movement): AAT: 300021426
earthenware: AAT: 300140803
ceramics (object genre): AAT: 300151343
Cliff_Clarice: ULAN: 500091181
source file
object_notes_2_b-0137.xml.nores