Tag: Ramie

  • Picasso goat’s head plate is sold, leaves island New Years Day

    Picasso goat’s head plate is sold, leaves island New Years Day

    Dec. 20, 2013

    Hurry in to Rob Schouten Gallery for a final chance to see a cool piece of art by the great master, Pablo Picasso.

    A white, earthenware ceramic plate made by Picasso is on view at Rob Schouten Gallery at Greenbank Farm. The plate was sold Thursday, to a collector from Atlanta, Ga., but remains in the gallery for viewing through Wednesday, Jan. 1.

    This extraordinary glazed ceramic plate, one of an edition of 60, is beautifully decorated with a raised design of a goat’s head in profile in green and black on a cream background.

    Picasso Plate 3 copy (500x375)

    Picasso made the plate some time in 1946 or ’47 at the Madoura Pottery Workshop near the town of Vallauris in Southern France. George and Suzanne Ramie were the owners, and collaborated with Picasso to produce 633 pieces at their studio over a period of 24 years.

    The plate’s new owner, Thom Hazlitt of Atlanta, Ga., got the Google Alert on Monday, Dec. 16, that the plate was for sale on Whidbey Island. Hazlitt had previously owned another plate from the edition by Picasso, and said he regretted selling it earlier this year.

    “This one looks like it has some variance to me,” Hazlitt said. “The snout is filled in with dark black matte glaze. The one that I had didn’t have that. The catalogue doesn’t show every variant,” he added.

    Hazlitt refers to “Picasso: Catalogue of the Edited Ceramic Works 1947 – 1971,” authored by Alain Ramie, the son of the Madoura studio owners.

    Hazlitt said that he is hobbyist collector of Picasso’s works. Besides having the Google Alert, he also finds works by trolling eBay (that’s how he bought the first plate) and also keeps a rolodex full of collectors.

    The plate is identified by a method that was named “Ceramic Editions of Picasso.” Pieces so edited are certified by an edition monogram or a graphic sign that appears on the reverse side of the ceramic piece.

    Hurry over to RSG to see this Picasso plate, with it’s charming Esmerelda goat’s head, before it leaves for Georgia!

    Visit Rob Schouten Gallery, for hours and more info.

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  • Picasso piece on view now at Rob Schouten Gallery in Greenbank

    Picasso piece on view now at Rob Schouten Gallery in Greenbank

    BY PATRICIA DUFF
    Dec. 15, 2013

    It’s not every day a work by Picasso comes to Whidbey Island, but that day is here.

    A white, earthenware ceramic plate made by Pablo Picasso is on view at Rob Schouten Gallery at Greenbank Farm. This extraordinary glazed ceramic plate is beautifully decorated with a raised design of a goat’s head in profile in green and black on a cream background.

    Picasso made the plate some time in 1946 or ’47 at the Madoura Pottery Workshop near Vallauris, France. He carved the goat’s head in wet clay. He then had the clay fired, and the hardened designed served as a mold for the finished product. Thus, the plate shows the design of the goat in relief; raised lines in a pattern typical of the style. The plate was then pressed, dried and glazed before being fired in an edition of 60 at the Madoura Pottery Workshop.

    Picasso Plate 8 copy (500x375)
    Madoura Pottery Workshop stamp with Pablo Picasso imprint. / Photos courtesy of Rob Schouten Gallery

     

    Picasso’s plate found its way onto Whidbey Island through Coupeville resident Katherine Madrone Moulton, whose parents, the late Robert and Helen Moulton of Stanford, Calif., had a small art collection and received the plate as a gift.

    “The plate was on a stand on sideboard in dining room watching us eat our family dinners,” Moulton said.

    George and Suzanne Ramie were the owners of the pottery workshop in southern France, and worked with Picasso for 24 years. Picasso collaborated with the couple to produce 633 pieces at their Madoura studio.

    Alain Ramie, the couple’s son, authored “Picasso: Catalogue of the Edited Ceramic Works 1947 – 1971.” In it, he describes Picasso’s fascination with the goat:

    For Picasso, 1952 was the year of the goat. Picasso’s pet Esmeralda must have caught his eye in full force, because he created a number of astounding portraits of her in several media that year, including a number of paintings, a few incredible prints, and some ceramics, including this stunning masterpiece. All these goats bear a distinct smile, which reliably evokes a corresponding one in the viewer. We’ve named this goat Esmeralda, after Picasso’s eponymous pet due to Esmeralda’s happy face, the brilliant style with which Picasso carved her, the lovely ways in which she has been painted and glazed. Here she is somewhat haughtily and very contentedly munching a mouthful of shrubbery.

    The plate is identified by a method that was named “Ceramic Editions of Picasso.” Pieces so edited are certified by an edition monogram or a graphic sign that appears on the reverse side of the ceramic piece. The Moulton family Picasso plate was authenticated in 1995 and is on sale at Rob Schouten Gallery for $3,800.

    Here’s your chance to see a Pablo Picasso out of southern France on Whidbey Island.

    CLICK HERE to read more entertaining and informative WLM stories and blogs.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.