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Art by Medium: Porcelain

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Medium: Porcelain
Berlin KPM Portrait Porcelain 'Orientalin' Two-Handle Vase
Berlin KPM Portrait Porcelain 'Orientalin' Two-Handle Vase

Berlin KPM Portrait Porcelain 'Orientalin' Two-Handle Vase

By Königliche Porzellan-Manufaktur (KPM)

Located in New York, NY

KPM and inscribed n. C. Kiesel, titled Orientalin in red to the underside, with underglaze blue scepter mark and impressed letters and numbers. Origin: German Date: Late 19th Centur...

Category

Late 19th Century Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Worker Vase

Worker Vase

By Carolyn Barlock

Located in Colorado Springs, CO

Original sculpture vase made of porcelain, gold and Persian lusters by artist Carolyn Barlock.

Category

21st Century and Contemporary Art Nouveau Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Gold

Laurel Tray

Laurel Tray

By Carolyn Barlock

Located in Colorado Springs, CO

Original sculpture tray made of porcelain, gold and Persian lusters by artist Carolyn Barlock. Edition IV.

Category

21st Century and Contemporary Art Nouveau Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Gold

Egée l'été
Egée l'été

Egée l'été

Located in Miami Beach, FL

François Bauer is a visual ceramist born in 1986, currently based in Strasbourg, France. After studying graphic design in Chaumont, he pursued his education in object design at HEAR ...

Category

2010s Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Enamel

Principled Opportunism Matter

Principled Opportunism Matter

Located in Miami Beach, FL

Ruan Hoffmann uses ceramic earthenware as his preferred medium. Ruan Hoffmann chooses familiar objects such as plates as his canvases, however the resulting works are not presented a...

Category

2010s Abstract Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Ceramic, Porcelain, Glaze

KPM Porcelain Plaque - German "The Mandoline Player"
KPM Porcelain Plaque - German "The Mandoline Player"

KPM Porcelain Plaque - German "The Mandoline Player"

Located in Jacksonville, FL

Frame Size: Height: 18.75" x Width: 15.75" Frame Thickness: 3.25" Picture Size: Height: 12.25" x Width: 9.50" Immerse yourself in the delicate beauty of this exquisite porcelain a...

Category

19th Century Victorian Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Green metallic platter with bronze filagree center.

Green metallic platter with bronze filagree center.

By Lois Sattler

Located in Boston, MA

Artist Commentary: Green metallic platter with bronze filigree center. Medium: ceramic porcelain. Size: 14 inch diameter and 2 inches deep (35 cm diameter and 5 cm deep). Made in Cal...

Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Impressionist Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Ceramic, Porcelain

White Platter with Silver Lines

White Platter with Silver Lines

By Lois Sattler

Located in Boston, MA

Artist Commentary: Round porcelain white platter with silver lines. For decorative use only. Stand not included. All the pieces can be outdoors in rain o...

Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Impressionist Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Ceramic, Porcelain

Gotta go

Gotta go

Located in Miami Beach, FL

Ruan Hoffmann uses ceramic earthenware as his preferred medium. Ruan Hoffmann chooses familiar objects such as plates as his canvases, however the resulting works are not presented a...

Category

2010s Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Ceramic, Porcelain, Glaze

Gone but not away

Gone but not away

Located in Miami Beach, FL

Ruan Hoffmann uses ceramic earthenware as his preferred medium. Ruan Hoffmann chooses familiar objects such as plates as his canvases, however the resulting works are not presented a...

Category

2010s Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Ceramic, Porcelain, Glaze

Some more

Some more

Located in Miami Beach, FL

Ruan Hoffmann uses ceramic earthenware as his preferred medium. Ruan Hoffmann chooses familiar objects such as plates as his canvases, however the result...

Category

2010s Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Ceramic, Porcelain, Glaze

NIGHT SWIM

NIGHT SWIM

Located in Miami Beach, FL

Ruan Hoffmann uses ceramic earthenware as his preferred medium. Ruan Hoffmann chooses familiar objects such as plates as his canvases, however the result...

Category

2010s Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Ceramic, Porcelain

Ceramic Texture Wall Sculpture Abstract Color

Ceramic Texture Wall Sculpture Abstract Color

By Neil Tetkowski

Located in Buffalo, NY

The material of choice for Neil Tetkowski's abstract sculptural work comes directly from the Earth. Most often he uses clay, which he believes is the perfect medium to express his re...

Category

2010s Abstract Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Zone 1
Zone 1

Zone 1

Located in Barcelona, CT

"... It is always near you this image that passes..." of Apollinaire Poem of Apollinaire without punctuation Modernity, diversity of the world of his century, how beautiful it is! I...

Category

2010s Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Stoneware, Porcelain

Léviathan
Léviathan

Léviathan

Located in Barcelona, CT

Behind this soft form, a colossal monster, whose shape is not specified. Leviathan, well known in pre-biblical sources, engages in a primordial battle between the Creator and the marine forces. For a certain Thomas Hobbes...

Category

2010s Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Labdanum
Labdanum

Labdanum

Located in Barcelona, CT

Eleanor has a keen sense of spirituality. Myrrh, frankincense and labdanum are always present in her fragrances, like a reminder of this spirituality... She often thinks of her frag...

Category

2010s Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Neo
Neo

Neo

By Thomas Broadbent

Located in New York, NY

porcelain edition of 5 (signed by the artist) 13"x9"x9" This limited edition cast porcelain sculpture by Thomas Broadbent represents a near Earth Asteroid and Broadbent’s asteroid...

Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Porcelain Portrait of Woman in Giltwood Frame
Porcelain Portrait of Woman in Giltwood Frame

Porcelain Portrait of Woman in Giltwood Frame

Located in Jacksonville, FL

Exceptional porcelain plaque of a beautiful lady mounted in an ornate Italian giltwood baroque style frame, dating back to the early 1900’s. Frame measurements are 8.5" high by 5" wi...

Category

Early 20th Century Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain, Wood, Paint

Antique German porcelain plaque signed 'Haak'
Antique German porcelain plaque signed 'Haak'

Antique German porcelain plaque signed 'Haak'

Located in London, GB

Antique German porcelain plaque signed 'Haak' German, late 19th Century Frame: Height 42cm, width 36cm, depth 3cm Plaque: Height 28.5cm, width 22.5cm, depth 0.5cm This fine and detailed German porcelain plaque depicts a man and a woman in medieval dress...

Category

Late 19th Century Romantic Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain, Paint

Silence (Pink)
Silence (Pink)

Silence (Pink)

Located in New York, NY

Johannes Nielsen (b.1979) was born in Falkenberg, Sweden. He is an artist who uses bronze sculpture to celebrate life and its beauty. He believes that sculptures of the human body ca...

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Bronze

Silence (Green)
Silence (Green)

Silence (Green)

Located in New York, NY

Johannes Nielsen (b.1979) was born in Falkenberg, Sweden. He is an artist who uses bronze sculpture to celebrate life and its beauty. He believes that sculptures of the human body ca...

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Bronze

Untitled (Collage I)

Untitled (Collage I)

By Toni Ross

Located in Fairfield, CT

Untitled (Collage I), 2013 Black slip, porcelain, grog, oil pastel, graphite, cotton gauze and cotton thread on paper

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain, Cotton, Thread, Paper, Slip, Oil Pastel, Graphite

Gentle touch

Toni RossGentle touch, 2013

Price Upon Request

Gentle touch

By Toni Ross

Located in Fairfield, CT

Gentle Touch, 2013 Black clay, porcelain, grog, and graphite collage on paper

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Clay, Porcelain, Paper, Graphite

Three Graces with Smartphone
Three Graces with Smartphone

Three Graces with Smartphone

Located in Rye, NY

This piece was from the period when I created standing figures in clay working from live models. These three women were friends, students at SUNY Purchase, and enjoyed working together to develop their respective poses and the overall composition. The piece derives from three specific art-historical references, fused into something contemporary. The first, from the title, is from a long tradition of Three Graces sculptures...

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain, Stoneware

Noborigama Man on Pillar- Eyes Closed
Noborigama Man on Pillar- Eyes Closed

Noborigama Man on Pillar- Eyes Closed

Located in Rye, NY

This head is a porcelain piece fired in wood kiln on a mountaintop in Cold Spring, NY. A community of ceramists is needed to fire one of these kilns as we take shifts around the cloc...

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Steel

$ 2 from New Zealand (White)

$ 2 from New Zealand (White)

By Houben R.T.

Located in New York, NY

Houben R.T is an Avant-garde painter and draftsman with his own unmistakable voice. Houben was born in Bulgaria and graduated with a degree in painting from the Conservative Art Acad...

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Cast Stone, Limestone, Bluestone

$ 2 from New Zealand (Bronze)

$ 2 from New Zealand (Bronze)

By Houben R.T.

Located in New York, NY

Houben R.T is an Avant-garde painter and draftsman with his own unmistakable voice. Houben was born in Bulgaria and graduated with a degree in painting from the Conservative Art Acad...

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Cast Stone, Limestone, Bluestone

Panda Uan Zai

Hung YiPanda Uan Zai, 2016

Price Upon Request

Panda Uan Zai

Located in New York, NY

a sculpture by Hing Yi

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Enamel, Steel, Stainless Steel

Sheep

Hung YiSheep, 2015

Price Upon Request

Sheep

Located in New York, NY

Hung Yi was born in Taichung, Taiwan in 1970. The artist’s works are inspired by Taiwanese culture or day-to-day life in Taiwan. In the 1990s, it was popula...

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Enamel, Steel, Stainless Steel

Campbell Soup Set
Campbell Soup Set

Campbell Soup Set

By (after) Andy Warhol

Located in New York, NY

The set consists of -------(1)10 1/2 inch dinner plate (1) 8 1/4 inch side plate (1) 9 1/8 inch Large soup bowl and (1) 4 inch high x 3 1/4 inch wide mug. Each piece has the signature of Andy Warhol...

Category

1990s Pop Art Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Ship Vessel by Ron Nagle
Ship Vessel by Ron Nagle

Ship Vessel by Ron Nagle

By Ron Nagle

Located in Morton Grove, IL

Ron Nagle Ship Cup porcelain, glaze and red enamel overglaze 2015 Ron Nagle is one of the most important sculptors in the United States. He work is highly collected and included in museum collections such as Shigaraki Museum, Japan; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Musée de Plastique, Paris; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; and the Stedelijk Museum in the Netherlands. He was born in San Francisco and began working with ceramics during the 1950s as a high school student. In 1961 he apprenticed to Peter Voulkos at the University of California, Berkeley, and later exhibited his work alongside Voulkos, Ken Price, and other innovative West Coast artists working in clay. His work is inspired by such artists as Giorgio Morandi, Phillip Guston, and George Herriman...

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Enamel

Still Life on Porcelain
Still Life on Porcelain

Still Life on Porcelain

By Tom Wesselmann

Located in Missouri, MO

Tom Wesselmann, (1931-2004) "Still Life" (Stilleben) 1988 Porcelain with Polychrome Ed. 169/299 Porcelain Size: approx. 13 x 14 inches Overall Size: approx. 18 3/4 x 20 inches Foun...

Category

1980s Pop Art Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

"Pagoda" Porcelain Sculpture 30" x 18" x 18" inch Edition AP by Huang Yulong
"Pagoda" Porcelain Sculpture 30" x 18" x 18" inch Edition AP by Huang Yulong

"Pagoda" Porcelain Sculpture 30" x 18" x 18" inch Edition AP by Huang Yulong

By Huang Yulong

Located in Culver City, CA

"Pagoda" Porcelain Sculpture 30" x 18" x 18" inch Edition AP by Huang Yulong Edition of 3 - sold out AP available Other colors available per request * * * ATT: handling time mig...

Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Porcelain Kate – Nick Knight, sculpture, Kate Moss, Model, Fashion, porcelain
Porcelain Kate – Nick Knight, sculpture, Kate Moss, Model, Fashion, porcelain

Porcelain Kate – Nick Knight, sculpture, Kate Moss, Model, Fashion, porcelain

Located in Zurich, CH

NICK KNIGHT (*1958, Great Britain) Porcelain Kate 2013 Nymphenburger hard porcelain in white bisque Sculpture 36,6 x 61 x 15 cm (14 3/8 x 24 x 5 7/8 in.) Edition of 25; Ed. no. 6/25 Nick Knight is among the world’s most influential and visionary photographers. He has worked on a range of often controversial issues during his career – from racism, disability, ageism, and more recently fat-ism. He continually challenges conventional ideals of beauty. The photographer Nick Knight has been portraying international supermodel Kate Moss for more than two decades. As one of the most photographed women in the world who has been accompanied by Knight for many years, Moss serves as the subject of his work. In cooperation with the Porzellan Manufaktur Nymphenburg, the world famous photographer has eternalised a three-dimensional portrait of the Briton in biscuit porcelain for the first time. The figurine developed in the master workshops of Nymphenburg in 2014 is reminiscent of Christian iconography. Attributes such as the filigree crown of thorns and the voluminous loincloth make reference to religious relics...

Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

Napoleon
Napoleon

Napoleon

By Manufacture Nationale de Sèvres

Located in Missouri, MO

Sevres 19th C. Original Hand Painted Porcelain Signed "G Poitevin" approx 9 x 5 inches/15 x 12 framed The vast and diverse production of the Sèvres factory in the nineteenth century resists easy characterization, and its history during this period reflects many of the changes affecting French society in the years between 1800 and 1900. Among the remarkable accomplishments of the factory was the ability to stay continuously in the forefront of European ceramic production despite the myriad changes in technology, taste, and patronage that occurred during this tumultuous century. The factory, which had been founded in the town of Vincennes in 1740 and then reestablished in larger quarters at Sèvres in 1756, became the preeminent porcelain manufacturer in Europe in the second half of the eighteenth century. Louis XV had been an early investor in the fledgling ceramic enterprise and became its sole owner in 1759. However, due to the upheavals of the French Revolution, its financial position at the beginning of the nineteenth century was extremely precarious. No longer a royal enterprise, the factory also had lost much of its clientele, and its funding reflected the ruinous state of the French economy. However, the appointment in 1800 of Alexandre Brongniart (1770–1847) as the administrator of the factory marked a profound shift in its fortunes. Trained as both an engineer and a scientist, Brongniart was both brilliant and immensely capable, and he brought all of his prodigious talents to the running of the troubled porcelain factory. He directed the Sèvres factory as administrator until his death in 1847, and during those five decades influenced every aspect of its organization and production. Much of the factory’s old, undecorated stock was immediately sold off, and new forms—largely in the fashionable, more severe Neoclassical style—were designed to replace out-of-date models. The composition for hard-paste porcelain was improved, and the production of soft paste, for which the factory had been famous in the previous century, was abandoned in 1804. New enamels colors were devised, and Brongniart oversaw the development of a new type of kiln that was both more efficient and cost-effective. Much of the factory’s output during Brongniart’s first decade reflected the prevailing Empire taste, which favored extensive gilding, rich border designs, and elaborate figural scenes (56.29.1–.8). Backgrounds simulating marble or a variety of hardstones were employed with greater frequency (1987.224); the new range of enamel colors developed under Brongniart made it easier to achieve these imitation surfaces, and it is thought that his interest in mineralogy provided the impetus for this type of decoration. For objects produced in sets, such as dinner, tea, and coffee services, and even garnitures of vases, Brongniart preferred decorative schemes that linked the objects in terms of subject matter as well as stylistically. Dinner services were given coherence by the use of an overall theme, in addition to shared border patterns and ground colors. One of the best examples of this can be found in the “Service des Départements,” which was conceived by Brongniart in 1824 (2002.57). Each of the plates in the service was decorated with a famous topographical view of the département (administrative unit) of France that it represented, and its border was painted with small cameo portraits of figures from the region, as well as symbols of the major arts, industries, and products of the area. This same type of thematic unity is found on a coffee service produced in 1836 (1986.281.1ab–4). All of the pieces of the service are decorated with scenes depicting the cultivation of cacao, from which chocolate is made, or various stages in the preparation of chocolate as a beverage. The compositions were conceived and executed by Jean Charles Develly, a painter at Sèvres who was responsible for many of the most ambitious dinner services produced at the factory during Brongniart’s tenure. The range of objects produced in the first half of the nineteenth century was enormous, as were the types of decoration that they employed. A recent exhibition catalogue devoted to Brongniart’s years at Sèvres indicates that ninety-two new designs for vases were introduced, as were eighty-nine different cup models, and the types of objects produced by the factory included every sort of form required by a dinner or dessert service, coffee and tea wares, decorative objects such as vases, and functional objects such as water jugs, basins, and toiletry articles. A new form rarely replaced an older one; the range of production simply increased. The same was true with types of decoration, as the factory was working in a wide variety of styles at any given time. From the earliest years of the Sèvres factory, its painters had copied not only contemporary compositions but also prints and paintings from earlier periods. However, under Brongniart, the factory sought to copy famous paintings with the specific intention of recording the “true” appearance of works increasingly perceived to be fragile. Works by a wide variety of artists were copied, but those by Raphael were especially popular. Raphael’s stature is reflected in a vase of 1834 in which a cameo-style portrait of the artist decorates the primary reserve, while on the back an artist’s palette is encircled by the names Titian, Poussin, and Rubens (1978.373). Just as works by earlier artists were copied, so too were decorative techniques of previous centuries. The interlace patterns of so-called Saint-Porchaire ceramic ware of the sixteenth century served as the inspiration for the decoration on a cup of 1837 (2003.153). The form of the cup itself derives from Renaissance silver forms made in Italy and France. However, the palette of vibrant reds, greens, blues, and yellows contrasts markedly with the muted browns and off whites of Saint-Porchaire wares and reflects the reinterpretation of historical styles that was characteristic of so much of nineteenth-century decorative arts. Interest in the Gothic style emerged early in Brongniart’s tenure at Sèvres and remained popular for much of the nineteenth century. Strict adherence to Gothic motifs was rarely observed, however, and the Gothic style was more evoked than faithfully copied. This tendency is reflected in a pair of vases (1992.23.1) for which the model was designated vase gothique Fragonard (named after the vase’s designer, Alexandre Evariste Fragonard [1780–1850]. The Gothic elements lie more in the painted decoration than in the form itself, and the style of the painting reflects a Renaissance technique rather than a medieval one. The palette of grays and whites on a blue ground instantly recalls the enamel-on-copper wares produced in Limoges, France, in the sixteenth century, and its use on these vases indicates the willingness to freely mix artistic styles and techniques of different periods in order to achieve new aesthetic effects. The eclecticism and historicism that characterized so much of the production during Brongniart’s tenure continued after his death in 1847. The factory’s output reflected an ongoing desire for technical innovation as well as a wide embrace of diverse decorative styles that were employed simultaneously. A tea and coffee service of 1855–61 (69.193.1–.11) embodies the selective borrowing of forms and motifs that is found so frequently in Sèvres production of the middle decades of the nineteenth century. The shapes used for the different components of the service evoke both China and the Near East, an obvious allusion to the origins of the two beverages. The openwork decoration refers directly to Chinese ceramics made in this technique, and the decoration employs a variety of Chinese emblems. However, the palette of pink and gold, entirely European in character, serves to neutralize the Asian aspects of the service. Perhaps the only thread that can be said to run through much Sèvres production of the nineteenth century is the proclivity to borrow freely from various historical styles and then to either reinterpret these styles or combine them in unprecedented ways. A standing cup of 1879 (1990.238a,b) draws upon silver cups of the Renaissance for its form, but in this instance the size of the porcelain cup dwarfs any of its metal prototypes. Its style of decoration derives from Limoges painted enamels of the sixteenth century, but the prominent use of gilding throughout reflects its wholly nineteenth-century character. This cup was presented by the French government to one of the first-prize winners at the 1878 Exposition Universelle. It was with the advent of the Art Nouveau style at the very end of the nineteenth century that historicism lost its grip at Sèvres, and indeed throughout the decorative arts, and forms inspired by nature and often characterized by asymmetry become dominant. This reliance upon natural forms is fully evident in a coffee service of 1900–1904 (1988.287.1a,b). The designer, Léon Kann...

Category

Late 19th Century Art by Medium: Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain, Oil

Porcelain art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Porcelain art available on 1stDibs. While artists have worked in this medium across a range of time periods, art made with this material during the 21st Century is especially popular. If you’re looking to add art created with this material to introduce a provocative pop of color and texture to an otherwise neutral space in your home, the works available on 1stDibs include elements of purple, red, blue, orange and other colors. There are many well-known artists whose body of work includes ceramic sculptures. Popular artists on 1stDibs associated with pieces like this include Jeff Koons, Melanie Sherman, Königliche Porzellan-Manufaktur (KPM), and Danielle Weigandt. Frequently made by artists working in the Contemporary, Abstract, all of these pieces for sale are unique and many will draw the attention of guests in your home. Not every interior allows for large Porcelain art, so small editions measuring 0.01 inches across are also available