
Paul Soldner Decorative Colorful Midcentury Ceramic Pottery Plate Low Bowl
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Paul Soldner Decorative Colorful Midcentury Ceramic Pottery Plate Low Bowl
About the Item
- Creator:Paul Soldner (Artist)
- Dimensions:Height: 2 in (5.08 cm)Diameter: 8 in (20.32 cm)
- Style:Mid-Century Modern (Of the Period)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:20th Century
- Condition:Repaired: One hairline crack in the edge of the underside of the base (please see photos. It is hard to see). May have been possibly repaired at one time. We do not know for sure. Does not show through to plate's face or distract from work overall. Wear consistent with age and use. In good vintage condition with one hairline crack in the edge of the underside of the base (please see photos. It is hard to see). May have been repaired at one time. Does not show through to plate's face or distract from work overall.
- Seller Location:Studio City, CA
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU2254316505892
Paul Soldner
After studying under Peter Voulkos at the Los Angeles County Art Institute, Denver native Paul Soldner (1921–2011) became a pottery professor there in the 1960s, when the revolutionary California Clay Movement took root.
Soldner pioneered American-style raku firing methods, experimental updates of the centuries-old Japanese process, which involve pulling red-hot sculptures out of the kiln to be bathed in smoke or dipped in cold water, resulting in beautifully frazzled glazes.
“These new firing and post-firing reduction methods often led to spontaneous, unpredictable and quite wonderful results,” says Greg Nielson, of Dwell Floor Five, in Studio City, California.
Soldner’s raku vases, for instance, with their charred surfaces, seem to smile humbly through the scars of their past adversity.
Alongside the likes of Toshiko Takaezu, Soldner innovated chunky, funky ceramics in the mid-century and beyond. He is one Voulkos student at whom enthusiasts should take a serious look, advises dealer Jayson Lawfer.
The owner of The Nevica Project, a gallery with venues in Chicago and Kansas City, Lawfer explains that Soldner “was a master of raku and was credited with bringing the historic Asian technique to the U.S.” He adds that “Soldner used simple techniques of throwing pottery on the wheel, but to make his sculptural forms more interesting, he also pressed burlap into the clay and stepped on it to give it different textures."
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