by Dorothea
Burstyn
(click on photos to enlarge image)
DESIGNED BY ARCHITECTS
Metalwork from the Margo Grant Walsh Collection. An
Exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
March 15 to August 3, 2008
EXHIBITION REVIEW
This exhibition features metalwork pieces designed by
prominent architects from the 19th to the 21st century. The
involvement of architects in decorative arts has its roots in
the concept of the Gesamtkunstwerk, a term generally attributed
to Richard Wagner, who saw his operas as an integral artwork of
music, theatre and visual art.
The Vienna Secessionists applied this term to architecture to
express a synthesis of multiple art forms, or more simply, to
describe a building where every part is designed to be part of a
whole. Margo Grant Walsh’s collection includes examples of
Wiener Werkstätte production - a beautiful tulip-shaped
centerpiece and a pitcher by Josef Hoffmann, the Darmstadt
Colony is represented by a Peter Behrens spoon and fork set,
Model No. 4800, manufactured by M. J. Rückert and a patinated
copper and brass tea machine designed by Albin Müller.
|
|
tulip-shaped centerpiece by Josef Hoffmann
|
pitcher by Josef Hoffmann
|
One showcase is dedicated to the works of Charles Robert
Ashbee, who founded the Guild of Handicraft and only employed
untrained workers in order to have full control of their
development as craftsmen. Among his works is a marvelous set of
jam or butter dishes and a breathtakingly beautiful muffin dish,
both decorated with semiprecious stones – one of the trademarks
of Ashbee’s designs.
|
|
muffin dish by Charles Robert Ashbee
|
salt and pepper by Charles Robert Ashbee
|
Many more designs from architects born in what Margo calls
the "Magic Decade" (1860-70), like Henri van der Velde and
Richard Riemerschmid, round out the visitor’s picture of this
early period.
|
ice cream set Henri van der Velde
|
Very impressive is the showcase with silver designed by
William Spratling here we find a coffeepot of marvelously balanced
design and a wide sterling bracelet with bezel-set
azure-malachite stones, which every girl would love to have on
her wrist.
|
|
bracelet with bezel-set azure-malachite
stones by William Spratling
|
coffeepot by William Spratling
|
My favorite Spratling pieces are a pair of large salad
servers in rosewood and inlaid silver, which Margo found on one
of her England trips.
|
salad servers in rosewood and inlaid silver
by William Spratling
|
In the last decades of the 20th century there was a renewed
interest in working with celebrated architects. In America the
firm of Swid Powell employed famous architects to design modern
functional table utensils and accessories, and in the exhibition
are the Courtney silver plate candlesticks, 1989, designed by
Charles Gwathmey and Robert Siegel. Reed & Barton produced
Diamond- pattern flatware from a design by Gio Ponti, adapted by
Robert H. Ramp for commercial production.
|
|
Courtney silver plate candlesticks
by Charles Gwathmey and Robert Siegel
|
Reed & Barton Diamond- pattern flatware by
Gio Ponti
|
Special mention must be given to the many pieces of modern
Italian silversmithing. Ettore Sottsass, who co-founded Memphis,
a radical Italian design group active from 1981-1988 in Milan,
is represented by his monumental centerpiece, described on the
exhibition label as "both architectonic and luxurious, the
Murmansk Fruit Stand was hailed as a transformation of function
by form". The silversmith’s studio San Lorenzo, Milan, was
founded by Italian silversmith Ciro Cacchione, who worked with a
group of internationally renowned architects. His aim was to
revive Italian silver production to reflect innovative modernism
as well as the Italian tradition of wonderful craftsmanship.
Here we see Lella Valle Vignelli’s Seicento necklace, more a
showpiece than a functional adornment, and the Pannocchia bowl
by Franco Albini and Franca Helg, designed as early as 1971, but
only executed in 2004.
The combination of red plastic and sterling silver not only
introduces color but also gives the silver of Maurizio Duranti a
whimsical touch. He designed the Tavoliere tray, Village sugar
bowl and pitcher from the Maduar Series, 955, dating to 1982,
and executed by Gabriele De Vecchi in 1995.
|
|
Maurizio Duranti: Tavoliere tray, Village
sugar bowl
and pitcher (1982)
|
toast-rack Duranti/De Vecchi
|
Compared to Margo’s monumental show at the San Francisco
Airport (see
article # 83 on ASCAS website) the Houston exhibition is
small. The curator of this exhibition, Cindi Strauss, is to be
congratulated for selecting and beautifully arranging fifty
exquisite pieces in a jewel-like setting.
Especially notable is the display of flatware pieces, which seem
to float in space, allowing the visitors to see them from all
sides. The combined display of jewelry and silver pieces, often
by the same designer/architect, is especially successful and
might lure the beginning collector.
The exhibition was generously supported by Gensler, a firm of
architects which Margo helped to build.
At the opening Margo Grant Walsh gave a beautiful lecture to an
audience of silver aficionados, architects and art students. She
related stories of events and people figuring prominently in
the development of her collection, and generally conveyed her
deep passion for design and how collecting had enriched her
life. As an aside, it pleases Margo that all three shows of her
silver collection took place in important buildings: the
Portland Museum of Art, designed by Pietro Belluschi; the San
Francisco Airport designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill (a
firm Margo worked for more than 10 years) and the Caroline Wiess
Law Building, Museum of Fine Arts Houston, designed by Mies van
der Rohe.
The book, "Collecting by design, Silver & Metalwork
of the Twentieth Century from the Margo Grant Walsh
Collection" (ISBN 978-0-300-13892-4) accompanies this
exhibition, but is really a record of the San Francisco
Airport Show, which exhibited about 800 pieces in 40
large showcases (it was a special pleasure to again meet
Wally Gilbert, the silversmith whose beaker is featured
on the cover of this book.)
The catalogue is written by Timothy O'Brien and Margo
Grant Walsh, with a preface by MFAH director Dr. Peter
Marzio and an introduction by Cindi Strauss. The
catalogue is published by the MFAH, attractively priced
($ 25.00) and available through the MFAH bookstore.
Designed by Architects: Metalwork from the Margo Grant
Walsh Collection is a must-see exhibition for anybody
who loves modern silver or wants to learn more about it.
I would like to thank Cindi Strauss and Frances Stephens,
both MFAH, for supplying the beautiful photos.
|
|
|
Collecting by Design - Silver & Metalwork of the
Twentieth Century
from the Margo Grant Walsh Collection
bookcover illustrated with a beaker by Wally Gilbert
|
Dorothea Burstyn - 2008 -
Dorothea Burstyn is the President of The Silver Society
of Canada
|
|
|