Jar thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ceramics, Room 139, The Curtain Foundation Gallery

Jar

1900 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Max Läuger (1864-1952) studied painting and interior design at Karlsruhe, Germany; he then taught at the art school while also working at potteries in Kandern between 1880 and 1890; he studied in Paris 1892-3 and there he began making lead-glazed slipware. Always ambitious and energetic, returning to Kandern he worked at a local pottery and then established his own pottery in 1895 while becoming a Professor at Karlsruhe university in 1898. As the opening date approached of the international exhibition, Paris, 1900, and his own ceramic production was becoming commercially established, he made a large number of wares celebrating the exhibition specifically to sell during its run like this vase lettered 'Paris Exposition 1900' in the decoration. He exhibited his ceramics at many German exhibitions as well as Paris 1900 and at St Louis in 1904

He was co-founder of the Deutscher Werkbund in 1907 and was also a painter, sculptor, architect and designer, and teacher at the Baden state art school. From 1916 he had a studio at the Karlsruhe Majolika-Manufaktur, working there until it was destroyed by bombs in 1944.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Earthenware with raised slip decoration in relief and glazed
Brief description
Jar of red earthenware with raised slip decoration in relief and glazed, made by Max Läeuger, Staatliche Majolika Manufaktur Karlsruhe, Germany, 1900
Physical description
Jar of red earthenware with raised slip decoration in relief and glazed. Inscribed round the mouth with 'PARIS EXPOSITION 1900'. Of globular form with a wide mouth. Four orange trees spring from a wreath of herbage on a blue ground.
Dimensions
  • Height: 15.2cm
  • Diameter: 14.9cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'PARIS EXPOSITION 1900' (In red round rhe mouth)
  • 'M L K' [In monogram] with the arms of the Grand Duchy of Baden [within a square]
  • 'L M M' [In monogram] (La Maison Moderne, Impressed)
  • 'a' (Incised)
Object history
Bought from La Maison Moderne

Historical significance: The Paris shop La Maison Moderne, established by Julius Maier-Graefe, specialised in the most progressive arts of the time.
Subjects depicted
Summary
Max Läuger (1864-1952) studied painting and interior design at Karlsruhe, Germany; he then taught at the art school while also working at potteries in Kandern between 1880 and 1890; he studied in Paris 1892-3 and there he began making lead-glazed slipware. Always ambitious and energetic, returning to Kandern he worked at a local pottery and then established his own pottery in 1895 while becoming a Professor at Karlsruhe university in 1898. As the opening date approached of the international exhibition, Paris, 1900, and his own ceramic production was becoming commercially established, he made a large number of wares celebrating the exhibition specifically to sell during its run like this vase lettered 'Paris Exposition 1900' in the decoration. He exhibited his ceramics at many German exhibitions as well as Paris 1900 and at St Louis in 1904

He was co-founder of the Deutscher Werkbund in 1907 and was also a painter, sculptor, architect and designer, and teacher at the Baden state art school. From 1916 he had a studio at the Karlsruhe Majolika-Manufaktur, working there until it was destroyed by bombs in 1944.
Collection
Accession number
1959-1900

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
Record URL
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