Skip to main content

Lisa Larson Trull

Lisa Larson - Trapp 'from Tripp Trapp Trull' - Gustavsberg
By Gustavsberg
Located in MAASTRICHT, LI
Product Description: Another cat animal from Lisa Larson is on offer here. This time we offer and
Category

Vintage 1970s Swedish Animal Sculptures

Materials

Earthenware

People Also Browsed

Decorative Ceramic Cat Bitossi Fiorato, Gold Flowers on Turquoise
By Fornasetti
Located in MILANO, IT
A coveted collector’s item as early as the 1950s, Fornasetti cats surprise with the sophisticated decorations that colour their surroundings with sheer exuberance.
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Italian Modern Vases

Materials

Ceramic

Kutani porcelain cat, Japan, c. 1900, Meiji Period.
By Kutani Studio
Located in Gargrave, North Yorkshire
Kutani porcelain okimono of a cat, c. 1900. Meiji Period. £490.00 Kutani porcelain okimono, Japan, c. 1900. Meiji Period. Finely modelled as a sleeping cat, its hair delineated in g...
Category

Antique 1890s Japanese Meiji Ceramics

Materials

Porcelain

Ceramic Persian Tabby Cat Large Mid Century Figurine
Located in Jacksonville, FL
Large ceramic cat statue stands 14" tall and is finished a gloss glaze. Good condition, minor cracks near bottom that do not affect structural integrity. For a shipping quote to your...
Category

Late 20th Century Hollywood Regency Animal Sculptures

Materials

Ceramic

Mexican Ceramic Cat Plate By Mara
Located in Tarrytown, NY
Ceramic plate of 3 cats , signed Mara , made in Mexico.
Category

Vintage 1980s Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic

Bruno Gambone Stoneware Abstract Sculpture Cat I
By Bruno Gambone
Located in Munich, DE
Cream white glazed ceramic cat made by Bruno Gambone in the 1970s, signed Gambone Italy on the bottom.
Category

Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Animal Sculptures

Materials

Stoneware

Ceramic Cat by Aldo Londi for Bitossi in 'Rimini blue' Italy Ca. 1960
By Aldo Londi
Located in South Salem, NY
Aldo Londi's Ceramic Cat for Bitossi, crafted in the iconic 'Rimini blue' glaze circa 1960, is a masterpiece of Italian ceramic artistry. Standing as a testament to Londi's creative ...
Category

Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Animal Sculptures

Materials

Ceramic

Pair of Vintage Blue Glazed Chinese Porcelain Cat Figurines- Signed
Located in Fort Washington, MD
Beautiful pair of turquoise blue ceramic cat figurines. This is a left and right matching pair of Asian blue art pottery cats, ceramic cat statues that face each other. Lovely vivid ...
Category

Early 20th Century Chinese Chinese Export Sculptures and Carvings

Materials

Porcelain

Pair of Scottish Bo'ness Cats with Glass Eyes
Located in Austin, TX
A fine pair of Scottish ceramic cats from the Bridgeness pottery near Bo'ness, each cat featuring glass eyes and Fine modeling in the round. Rd. No. 523391 - Registered in 1908 T...
Category

Early 20th Century Scottish Animal Sculptures

Materials

Pottery, Ceramic, Glass

Chinese 19th Century Porcelain Cizhou-Ware Cat "Pillow"
Located in Miami, FL
Chinese 19th Century Porcelain Cizhou-Ware Cat "Pillow" Offered for sale is a Chinese 19th-century soft paste porcelain Cizhou-Ware cat "Pillow". Heavily potted Chinese stoneware...
Category

Antique Late 19th Century Chinese Chinoiserie Ceramics

Materials

Porcelain

Mid-century modern Italian Porcelain Siamese cat (31x18x14cm) Cool retro decor!
Located in Firenze, FI
Hand made 1960's original modernist mid-century modern ceramic Siamese cat Technique: colored glazed ceramics (barboutine) Design period: early 1960's Origin: Italy Condition: Immac...
Category

Vintage 1960s Italian Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Porcelain, Pottery

Pair Of Staffordshire Pottery Reclining Cats
Located in Essex, MA
Each cat reclining with a ball between their feet. Nicely painted. Old price tag of 3,500.
Category

Antique 1850s English Ceramics

Materials

Pottery

Italian Ceramic Seated Cat
Located in New York, NY
Italian 1950s white ceramic figure of a life size seated cat with green eyes perched on a square pedestal base
Category

Vintage 1950s Italian Sculptures

Materials

Ceramic, Glass

Italian Ceramic Seated Cat
Italian Ceramic Seated Cat
H 33 in W 13 in D 11.5 in
Accolay, Three Animals in Wire and Ceramic Cat, Pelican and Rabbit, Signed
By Accolay Pottery
Located in Saint-Ouen, FR
Accolay, three animals in wire and ceramic: cat, pelican and rabbit. Signed.
Category

Vintage 1950s French Mid-Century Modern Ceramics

Materials

Iron

European Studio Ceramicist, Large Unique Figure of Lying Cat, 1980s
Located in Copenhagen, DK
European studio ceramicist. Large unique figure of a lying cat. Beautiful glaze in blue-green shades, 1980s. Measures: 20 x 11.5 cm. Signed. In excellent condition.    
Category

Vintage 1980s Unknown Modern Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic

Rouen, Wyvern Platter "à la guivre", France 18th Century
Located in PARIS, FR
Superb Rouen Wyvern platter ("à la Guivre") from 18th century France. Exquisite and rare museum quality piece. Decorations of a parrot carrying a branch, butterflies, an aquatic land...
Category

Antique 18th Century Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic

Cat Sculpture Ceramic Post Modern Memphis Style by Elyse Saperstein
Located in Bedford Hills, NY
Very cool cat! Post modern Memphis style ceramic black cat sculpture by American artist Elyse Saperstein, hallmarked by the artist.
Category

Late 20th Century American Post-Modern Animal Sculptures

Materials

Ceramic

Get Updated with New Arrivals
Save "Lisa Larson Trull", and we’ll notify you when there are new listings in this category.

Gustavsberg for sale on 1stDibs

The Gustavsberg porcelain factory was, for many decades, the largest ceramics maker in Sweden and home to some of the most innovative and ingenious makers of the past century. The company, founded in 1825, mass-produced a wide range of products: first decorative household items and tableware in the English style and later bathroom fixtures, including the first pressed-steel bathtubs that would oust heavy cast iron. But of first interest to collectors are the remarkable decorative works created in the Gustavsberg art pottery studio, in particular those by master ceramists Wilhelm Kåge, Berndt Friberg and Stig Lindberg

Gustavsberg began producing some individually crafted, highly decorated and richly glazed pieces in the 1860s. While the forms of their mass-produced vessels and plates derived from English, Continental and Asian styles, a select few painters won acclaim for their personal artistry. Gunnar Wennerberg became known for his work in the organic Art Nouveau style, and Josef Ekberg, the company’s design chief from 1908 to 1917, was revered for his expert use of iridescent lusterware glazes and the sgraffito technique, in which a decorative pattern is incised in the surface of a clay pot before it is glazed and fired. 

It was not until Ekberg’s successor, Wilhelm Kåge, opened Gustavsberg’s first dedicated art pottery studio that the work became widely recognized. Kåge’s “Argenta” series, which encompasses a variety of vessels coated with an oxidized green glaze and decorated in silver motifs, remains popular. Though perhaps his most striking works are his “Surrea” vases — white bisque porcelain in off-kilter forms inspired by Cubist paintings — and his “Farsta” wares, which include totemic, spindly footed stoneware vases and bowls with textured surfaces, glazed in brown, green and blue.

Kåge’s finest protégés, Berndt Friberg and Stig Lindberg, took over from Kåge as Gustavsberg’s design directors in 1945. Friberg was a master potter. He threw elegant, simple, symmetrical vases and bowls painstakingly coated in layer after layer of matte glazing to achieve a classic striated effect known as “rabbit’s fur.” Lindberg’s highly collectible studio ceramics fall into two principal categories: The first is made of white porcelain pieces in round, biomorphic or stylized natural forms. The second includes weightier vases — many with textured bodies and applied decorations — glazed in deep, earthy colors. As you will see from the works on these pages, Gustavsberg was a bastion of creativity and precise artistry that turned out a remarkable range of works whose style still resonates with lovers of Scandinavian design.

Finding the Right animal-sculptures for You

Invite the untamed wonders of the animal kingdom into your home — and do so safely — with the antique, new and vintage animal sculptures available on 1stDibs.

Artists working in every medium from furniture design to jewelry to painting have found inspiration in wild animals over the years. For sculptors, three-dimensional animal renderings — both realistic and symbolic — crisscross history and continents. In as early as 210 B.C., intricately detailed terracotta horses guarded early Chinese tombs, while North America’s native Inuit tribes living in the ice-covered Arctic during the 1800’s wore small animal figurines carved from walrus ivory. Indeed, animal sculpture has a long history, and beginning in the 19th century, the art form started becoming not only fashionable but artistically validated — a trend that continues today. At home, animal sculptures — polished bronze rhinos crafted in the Art Deco style or ceramic dogs of the mid-century modern era — can introduce both playfulness and drama to your decor.

In the case of the frosted glass sculptures crafted by artisans at legendary French glassmaker Lalique, founded by jeweler and glass artist René Lalique, some animal sculptures are purely decorative. With their meticulously groomed horse manes and detailed contours of their parakeet feathers, these creatures want to be proudly displayed. Adding animal sculptures to your bookcases can draw attention to your covetable collection of vintage monographs, while side tables and wall shelving also make great habitats for these ornamental animal figurines.

Some sculptures, however, can find suitable nests in just about any corner of your space. Whimsical brass flamingos or the violent, realist bronze lions created by Parisian sculptor Antoine-Louis Barye are provocative and versatile pieces that can rest on windowsills or your desk. Otherwise, the brass cat shoehorns and bronze porcupine ashtrays designed by Viennese artist Walter Bosse are no longer roaming aimlessly throughout your living room, as they’ve found a purpose to serve.

Embark on your safari today and find a fascinating collection of vintage, modern and antique animal sculptures on 1stDibs.