GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Around 1901, Wannopee Pottery of New Milford, Connecticut introduced Scarabronze, a line of art pottery designed by manager A. H. Nobel. Composed of local red clay as opposed to clay imported from England or elsewhere, the line's simple forms are adapted from ancient Egyptian artifacts. While some examples are slip-painted with Egyptian-inspired figures and motifs, most are unornamented and instead uniformly coated with a soft, metallic glaze reminiscent of copper or bronze. The firm marked all Scarabronze designs with a scarab impressed on the base, applied in relief to the body, or both in the case of this monumental vase with four prominent loop handles.
Source
Paul Evans, Art Pottery of the United States: An Encyclopedia of Producers and their Marks, Together with a Directory of Studio Potters Working in the United States through 1960 (New York: Feingold & Lewis Publishing Corp., 1987), 320-322.
NOTES
TMS Updates - GeoXrefs - place of origin - JBA (10/25/2017)
I added carets to italicize Scarabronze in the title in TMS.
I corrected a misspelling of Wannopee Pottery previously entered in the Constituents Module in TMS.
I updated Provenance, Exhibition History, Bibliography, and Published References in TMS.
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Cultures
Geography
Process/materials
Historical periods
Individuals
Subject terms
RELATED OBJECTS
PROVENANCE
Until 1993: Rosalie Berberian, New Haven, Connecticut [1]
From 1993: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from the above through David Rago Modern Auctions, LLP, New York, New York [1], [2]
[1] Laura Beach, "Berberian Sale A Tribute to Collector of 20 Years," Antiques and the Arts Weekly, March 19, 1993, 62-64.
[2] See David Rago Modern Auctions, LLP invoice (dated March 1, 1993, copy in Collections Records Object File) and Dallas Museum of Art invoice (dated March 12, 1993, copy in Collections Records Object File).
AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
IMAGE ASSETS
WEB RESOURCES
ARCHIVAL RESOURCES
FUN FACTS
TEACHING IDEAS
RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 1993.43
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General Description
Around 1901, Wannopee Pottery of New Milford, Connecticut introduced Scarabronze, a line of art pottery designed by manager A. H. Nobel. Composed of local red clay as opposed to clay imported from England or elsewhere, the line's simple forms are adapted from ancient Egyptian artifacts. While some examples are slip-painted with Egyptian-inspired figures and motifs, most are unornamented and instead uniformly coated with a soft, metallic glaze reminiscent of copper or bronze. The firm marked all Scarabronze designs with a scarab impressed on the base, applied in relief to the body, or both in the case of this monumental vase with four prominent loop handles.
Source
Paul Evans, Art Pottery of the United States: An Encyclopedia of Producers and their Marks, Together with a Directory of Studio Potters Working in the United States through 1960 (New York: Feingold & Lewis Publishing Corp., 1987), 320-322.
Fun Facts
Archival Resources
Web Resources
Notes
TMS Updates - GeoXrefs - place of origin - JBA (10/25/2017)
I added carets to italicize Scarabronze in the title in TMS.
I corrected a misspelling of Wannopee Pottery previously entered in the Constituents Module in TMS.
I updated Provenance, Exhibition History, Bibliography, and Published References in TMS.
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Cultures
Geography
Process/materials
Historical periods
Individuals
Subject terms
RELATED OBJECTS
PROVENANCE
Until 1993: Rosalie Berberian, New Haven, Connecticut [1]
From 1993: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from the above through David Rago Modern Auctions, LLP, New York, New York [1], [2]
[1] Laura Beach, "Berberian Sale A Tribute to Collector of 20 Years," Antiques and the Arts Weekly, March 19, 1993, 62-64.
[2] See David Rago Modern Auctions, LLP invoice (dated March 1, 1993, copy in Collections Records Object File) and Dallas Museum of Art invoice (dated March 12, 1993, copy in Collections Records Object File).
AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
1993.43
source file
object_notes_4_a-0394.xml.nores