I am addicted to Antiques Roadshow on PBS, I can't get enough of it. I am not as concerned with monetary values (although that is a fun aspect) and more intrigued by the unusual items that people bring in and their history. (I especially like it when know-it-all people get shut down by the appraiser when they tell them that their "provenance" is pure B.S.!) You always see those people who find something in the trash or buy something at a yard sale for 25¢ and it's worth thousands of dollars, well that yahoo may soon be me! I bought the planter/bowl/random art pottery below for a whopping 5¢ at an estate sale. I just liked the coloring and its "art nouveau-ness", turns out when I got it home there was a mark on the bottom. It was back to back "A"s in a box and a cursive signature that I couldn't make out. After some arduous poking around on the internet I discovered that it was a Van Briggle! (probably made in the 30's judging from the signature)
Here's a bit of the history from the Van Briggle Pottery website:
Artus Van Briggle, an American artist of Dutch descent, was established as a world class painter in Europe. Having been trained at the finest academies there, and with paintings accepted by the Paris Salon, he received the highest honors for a painter in his day. Yet his artistic passions would ultimate lead him away from his brush, canvas, and easel toward another artistic pursuit that would ultimately define his genius. Though Artus was a brilliant painter, his artistic passions were most eloquently expressed in the forms and colors of one of history’s oldest arts – pottery. From his years as a celebrated artist at the famed Rookwood Pottery in Ohio he knew first-hand the extraordinary range of expression an artist could achieve with the potter’s materials. His pursuit was the creation of exquisite satin matte glazes, like those he’d seen on ancient Chinese masterworks, in a palette of glorious colors, never achieved by any artist in modern times. The materials this brilliant artist would use for his greatest artistic pursuit would be minerals from the earth - clays, feldspars, oxides, - and the glowing orange flames of a fiery kiln. When transformed by the creative mind and the skilled hand these materials become the essence of both humanity and nature blended in unity. Clay and glaze are indeed extravagant media, offering the artist a lifetime of challenges and rewards. Artus, however, didn’t have a lifetime – tragically, he had contracted tuberculosis and, though a relatively young man, his future was uncertain. Artus had achieved some success in discovering a formula for these beautiful matte glazes prior to his arrival in Colorado but he continued his work there, seeking a standard of perfection not yet achieved. Pottery is a melding of art and science, and during the time when he conducted his experiments Artus knew success could not come without the patience of a scientist and the passion found in all great artists. He pursued his vision with tireless effort, though the effects of failing health often interrupted his progress. No specific date is recorded, but one day in the spring of 1901 he reached into the kiln, with the anticipation known well by countless potters throughout the ages, and finally held in his hands the perfect, rich, matte-glazed pottery he had sought for so long - the first pieces created in centuries, the first ever on this side of the world. Against the odds of failing health and a pursuit which no western artist had ever achieved, he succeeded; his passion was realized - a lost art was now reborn. The world would once again see and touch of the soft marble-like glazes first known by ancient Chinese masters half a world and so many generations away.
Read the rest on the Van Briggle Pottery history page.
I have yet to pinpoint the value of my particular piece, I have found the color and pattern (which I believe is called "spade leaf", the color is Ming Turquoise, priced in the $2000-$2500 range) and some pieces with another pattern of the same size & shape (for about $150-$250) but nothing that matches mine exactly. Right now I am unable to pinpoint if it is the glaze/pattern that is desirable or the kinds of pieces that I have seen it on that make up the bulk of the value. Either way a pretty good return on a nickel!
Behold my stellar find!
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