Physical Qualities
Earthenware with lustre glazes, 14 3/8 x 8 1/4 in. (36.5 x 21 cm.)
Credit Line
Mary Louise Gutman Bequest Fund
Object Number
2012.574
Contemporary with Louis Comfort Tiffany’s glassmaking experiments in New York, Clément Massier and his artistic director, Lucien Lévy-Dhurmer developed iridescent lustre glazes for pottery at Golfe-Juan in southern France. Their famed Grand Champignon vase evokes mushrooms springing from the forest floor amidst a tangle of brambles in dappled late-afternoon light. Glazed with fumed metal salts, the vase shimmers like heat rising from the ground, evoking a Symbolist world somewhere between dream and reality.
Massier exhibited with Tiffany at Sigfried Bing’s Paris gallery, L’Art Nouveau. The gallery became synonymous with the style that dominated international design circles at the turn of the 20th century. The suggestive organic energy of Art Nouveau forms with their sinuous whiplash curves were metaphors for the freedom and release sought by artists and designers trying to grow out from under the weight of academic tradition and critical expectation.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by purchase, 2012; Jason Jacques, NY
Cass, Claire and Martin Eidelberg. "Clément Massier: Master of Iridescence." New York: The Jason Jacques Gallery Press, 2006. p. 33-34, ill. p. 34.
Markings: M. Clément Massier, Golfe-Juan