DÜMLER & BREIDEN ‘JUWEL’ DÉCOR JUG VASE Nr. 53/15
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A lovely DÜMLER & BREIDEN Juwel décor jug vase from the company's early relief series of the 1970s.
DÜMLER & BREIDEN (aka D&B) was founded in 1883 by Peter Dümler and his brother-in-law and childhood friend Albert Breiden in the town of Höhr-Grenzhausen in the Kannenbäckerland, about 20 km northeast of Koblenz in the Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. (The Kannenbäckerland—the "potters' land" or, more literally, the "jug-bakers' land"—is a centuries-old home to ceramics manufacture in central Germany and the site of the largest clay deposit in Europe.) In the early 20th century DÜMLER & BREIDEN was known mainly for the production of beer steins and punch bowls in the typical Westerwald style, but it gradually established itself as one of West Germany's leading producers of art pottery in the years following WWII. Throughout the 1950s, '60s, and '70s it produced an enormous range of decorative ceramics, employing themes that ranged from traditional to pop art, in a wide variety of often quirky styles and forms. Its pieces were finished with a diversity of colorful, at times flamboyant, glazes and glaze combinations. Items produced within the Domino, Polar, and Saturn design series are among the most collectible. DÜMLER & BREIDEN closed in 1992.
Notes on identification: D&B most often used white to buff clay, although red clay is seen in the Terra series and in other "klinker"-style items. Marks are almost always impressed and are usually made using a distinctive, square-cut font. A crossed-swords D&B symbol (with the lowercase initials "D" and "B" as stylized hilts) is often present on the base along with the form and size numbers; where the symbol is absent, the form and size numbers are stacked. If an origin is indicated, it is always simply "Germany"—with no "West" designation. The full text "DÜMLER & BREIDEN" replaces the D&B symbol from 1980 onwards. Relief and Studio pieces were marked on the base with the names of those series. Very few items have unmarked bases, and markings are only very rarely obscured by glaze. Factory stickers are most commonly found only on very early items and usually include the crossed-swords symbol and the factory location, "Hohr."
KEY DESIGNERS:
- Ernst Dümler, a cousin
- Paul Zimmerling
- Rudolf Christmann
DETAILS
Maker – DÜMLER & BREIDEN
Production Period/Year – 1970s
Designer – UNKNOWN
Design Period/Year – 1970s
Origin – WEST GERMANY
Styles/Movements – ABSTRACT; MID-CENTURY MODERN
Materials – CERAMIC
Colors – ORANGE, BLACK, GREEN, INK BLUE
Condition – Excellent vintage condition. Never used. Perfect condition. May show slight traces of age.
Dimensions – 6" W × 5" D × 6 ½" H