Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
A favorite stoneware potter of the consummate Art Deco style-master, Emile-Jacques Ruhlmann, Lenoble was also a trusted colleague and son-in-law to the renowned ceramist, Ernest Chaplet. Lenoble studied at l’Ecole des Arts Decoratifs then worked for several years in commercial ceramics before joining Chaplet’s Choisy-le-Roi workshop in 1903. Like Chaplet’s early work, Lenoble’s stoneware shows a strong influence from Korean and Chinese ceramics of the Song Dynasty. Following Chaplet’s death in 1907, Lenoble moved toward a more geometric style, where floral and linear patterns dominate his work and the monochromatic glazes of his early style give way to two-tone and occasionally crystalline glazes.
1920s French Art Deco Vintage Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Stoneware
1920s French Art Deco Vintage Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Enamel
1930s French Art Deco Vintage Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Stoneware
1930s French Art Deco Vintage Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Ceramic
Mid-20th Century Chinoiserie Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Ceramic
Early 20th Century French Art Deco Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Copper
20th Century Dutch Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Earthenware
1920s Art Deco Vintage Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Stoneware
Mid-20th Century Czech Art Deco Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Glass
Early 20th Century French Art Deco Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Ceramic
Mid-20th Century Chinese Art Deco Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Ceramic
20th Century Art Deco Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Art Glass
Mid-20th Century Czech Art Deco Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Enamel
Mid-20th Century Czech Art Deco Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Enamel
1920s French Art Deco Vintage Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Stoneware
Mid-20th Century Chinese Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Ceramic
1920s Vintage Emile Lenoble Decorative Objects
Ceramic