Permanent Collection Record
Images






Metadata
Object ID |
1961.10869 |
Collection |
Ceramics Collection |
Media Collection |
American Art Pottery Collection |
Manufacturer |
Weller Pottery Company (1872-1948) |
Title |
Sicardo Vase Featuring an Iridescent Glaze and Fern Decorations |
Date |
Circa 1902 |
Decorator |
Jacques Sicard (1865-1923) |
Designer |
Jacques Sicard (1865-1923) |
Makers Marks |
This piece has an etched manufacturer's mark on the base that reads SICARD WELLER. This piece also has a die-impressed "7" on the underside. |
Description |
An example from Weller Pottery Company's Sicardo line introduced in 1902 and discontinued in 1907, this vase was designed and decorated by French ceramicist Jacques Sicard (1865-1923) and features an iridescent glaze and undulating floral decorations typical of Art Nouveau. Sicard studied with the French ceramicist Clément Massier who operated a factory and gallery complex in Golfe-Juan along France's Côte d'Azur. In 1883, Massier developed an iridescent, metallic luster glaze, which was awarded a gold medal at the 1900 Paris Exposition Universelle. Massier's student and apprentice, Jacques Sicard and his partner Henri Gellée, came to the United States by invitation of Sam Weller, the owner of Weller Pottery Company, to replicate Massier's iridescent line. |
Medium |
Earthenware, Glaze |
Technique |
Cast, Glazed, Hand Decorated |
Height (in) |
7.000 |
Diameter (in) |
3.000 |
Culture |
American |
School |
Art Nouveau |
Place of Origin |
Zanesville, Ohio, United States |
Credit Line |
Bequest of Estate of Sarah Hagerman |
People |
Hagerman, Sarah Sicard, Jacques |
Search Terms |
American Art American Art Pottery American Artists American Ceramics Art Nouveau Cast Ferns Green Hand Decorated Iridescent Leaves Luster Metallic Ohio Art Ohio Artists Ohio Companies Ohio Designers Ohio Manufacturers Pottery Artists Pottery Decorators Purple Sicardo Vases Weller Pottery Company (1872-1948) Weller Pottery Company Early Lines Zanesville Artists Zanesville, Ohio |
Location |
On view in the American Art Pottery Gallery, 1st Floor |