… Novelty is a concept of commerce, not an aesthetic concept…
Eva Zeisel, an iconic designer whose ceramic dinnerware and giftware was part of transforming design in midcentury America, died on Dec. 30, 2011. What an amazing woman. She lived to just past 105 — and worked throughout. I have been spending time immersing myself in reading about her life and designs, and the combination of joy + intelligence shines through. On this lengthy tribute, I have gathered all the best media — videos, articles, books — as well as Eva Zeisel products still available today — onto this one page.
One of my key takeaways from my research: Eva Zeisel refused to be held hostage by any philosophical design “movements”. In fact, she rejected the square lines and geometrical tyranny of the midcentury modernists — saying instead that designers should ignore any so-called common wisdom, and do the work that speak to their hearts. Or moreover: To their hands, given that she was a potter. She also said she loved rounded lines — the “S curve” — because she herself was a little bit… chubby. What a lovely woman. What a pip!
Read on for my comprehensive online guide to the life, work and products still available today of Eva Zeisel.
To start, from the New York Times’ obituary:
Ms. Zeisel (pronounced ZY-sel), along with designers like Mary and Russel Wright and Charles and Ray Eames, brought the clean, casual shapes of modernist design into middle-class American homes with furnishings that encouraged a postwar desire for fresh, less formal styles of living.
“Museum,” the porcelain table service that brought Ms. Zeisel national notice, was commissioned by its manufacturer, Castleton China, in conjunction with the Museum of Modern Art in New York, which introduced it in an exhibition in 1946, its first show devoted to a female designer.
Ms. Zeisel’s work, which ultimately spanned nine decades, was at the heart of what the museum promoted as “good design”: domestic objects that were beautiful as well as useful and whose beauty lent pleasure to daily life.
The Smithsonian Museum has a page featuring some early Eva Zeisel pottery.
The playful search for beauty was man’s first activity… all useful qualities and all material qualities were developed from the playful search for beauty… The word playful is a necessary aspect of our work, we have to make, produce lovely things throughout all of life.. and this for me is now 75 years….
… I used my work to fuel my curiosity…
- In 2002, filmaker Jyll Johnstone made what looks to be a comprehensive documentary about Zeisel’s life: Throwing Curves — Eva Zeisel. Premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, it’s an hour long. Here’s a description… and you can see a preview and buy it here.
… People like us were never poor, we just had no money…
…I’m better than before because i have so much experience… And I’m going to live a long time and still design on and on. Designing is pleasure for me.”
More good stories about Eva Zeisel
- Eva’s grandson Adam runs Eva Zeisel Originals, which sells a number of Eva’s designs. You can read more about Eva and see more photos on the site.
- A short but excellent interview with the Wall Street Journal in July 2011, after Leucos USA announced a new line of lighting based on Zeisel’s design.:
Says Eva: “In general, the inspiration for my work has been the human body—belly buttons, which I used quite often—nature and the Hungarian folk art of my youth… Modernism, rebelling against the ornament of the 19th century, limited the vocabulary of the designer. Modernism emphasized straight lines, eliminating the expressive S curve.” –
- Similarly, the LA Times mentions in its obituary:
In 2005, then-98-year-old Zeisel chuckled as she told a National Public Radio interviewer that she gravitated to curves “probably because I consist myself of curves instead of straight lines, meaning I’m a little bit fat.”
- Story on Forbes: The Life of Eva Zeisel and the Absurdity of Other People’s Rules. Right on, sister!
- John Foster of The Design Observer writes about visiting Zeisel in mid-2011, includes unique photos taken at her home.
- Royal Stafford, which manufactures her Century design today, has a good timeline.
Obituaries
- The New York Times — quoted above — the NYT also provides a pretty definitive writeup.
- The Los Angeles Times — also a nice long story:
All my work is mother-and-child,” Zeisel once said. Often critical of Modernism despite being one of its towering figures, the designer said she simply tried to recapture the “magic language of things.” And: “By her own estimation, Zeisel had designed 100,000 pieces of tableware, in styles as diverse as Bauhaus, Russian Art Nouveau and her best-known approach, organic modern.”
- The Washington Post — “… She resisted being characterized as an artist. ‘Art has more ego to it than what I do,’ she once told the New Yorker.”
Eva Zeisel products manufactured for sale today
- Eva Zeisel Originals — run by her grandson Adam — sells a variety of furniture and collectibles, including her classic dinnerware.
- Klein Reid collaborated with Zeisel and sells a number of beautiful pieces — like the sensuous 11-piece centerpiece, above — manufactured today.
- Eva Zeisel lighting by Lumens.
- Check The Rug Company for Eva Zeisel designs. They asked her a few questions. I love this:
The Rug Company: What does the word quality mean to you?
Eva Zeisel: Quality means having a purpose forever.
- FitzFelt produces Zeisel-shapes on felt wall coverings. C
- In conclusion: Eva Zeisel: A life, well lived. <3youtu
Hugh says
I have set of dishes she did for Bloomingdales when she was 101.
Jeff says
Love the tribute to Eva Zeisel- I have her “Caprice” pattern dinnerware from Hall.
Interesting how so many artists have such long lives- we recently lost modern artist Helen Frankenthaler as well.