Gien: the greatness of a factory
Monday, April 1st 2019
La Gazette Internationale, Philippe Dufour
Ulysse Bertrand (1851-1941),
Pair of trumpet vases with seagods,unique pieces in glazed ceramic with an entirely painted surface,one with Neptune and the other with Amphitrite, Gien holograph trademark, signed ; h.58, diam. 32 cm.
Estimate : €6,000/10,000
Pair of trumpet vases with seagods,unique pieces in glazed ceramic with an entirely painted surface,one with Neptune and the other with Amphitrite, Gien holograph trademark, signed ; h.58, diam. 32 cm.
Estimate : €6,000/10,000
Adrien Thibault (1844-1918),
"Francis I" orangeade service, c. 1879, glazed ceramic with an Italian Renaissance decoration, Gien holograph trademark and monogram: "AT".
Estimate: €1,200/1,500.
"Francis I" orangeade service, c. 1879, glazed ceramic with an Italian Renaissance decoration, Gien holograph trademark and monogram: "AT".
Estimate: €1,200/1,500.
models attracted much attention under the trademark G.G. & Cie, the initials of the new company "Geoffroy, Guerin & Cie". But Gien's golden age truly started in1878, the year when the factory received a gold medal at the Universal Exhibition in Paris, thus establishing an international name. After that, the innovations that made it famous followed in succession, including translucent glazes and Longwy-style enamels, Persian and Japanese motifs and the use of barbotine. At the same time industrial production really took off with sanitation products and wall tiles (including the bevelled tiles of the Paris metro). Best-sellers during the first few decades were earthenware pieces decorated with patterns inspired by Italian majolica; if mass-produced, they were hand-painted with an opulent decoration, often intertwining foliage and putti. This style is well illustrated here by a creation from around 1879 by the designer AdrienThibault: a highly colourful "François I'orangeade service with twisted handles (€1,200/1,500).
Unique pieces
The originality – and merit – of the Gien factory lay in encouraging its decoration paintersto give free rein to their imaginations. The result was ceramics that were truly treated like paintings. One of these virtuosos was Ulysse Bertrand (1851-1941), who designed a pair of trumpet vases"withsea gods" acquired directly from the artist'sfamily (€6,000/10,000). Inaround 1900,the head of theworks hopalsoembellishedaflatflaskwitha mythologicalscene on one side and a view of a bivouac during Charcot's polarexpeditionontheother.This unique piece can be snapped up at €3,000/5,000.These objects were oftenproducedasone-of-a-kind pieces, andtheJacquets focused on them when they were buying - to such an extent that they make up 90% of the lots on offer in this sale. Impressionism is a distinct feature with DominiqueAdolphe Grenet (1821-1885), who introduced the barbotine technique. You can buy a large fanjardinière he produced in the Barbizon style, dating from 1879, in glazed barbotine (€1,500/2,500). Meanwhile, in 1872, the decorative artist "J. Blu" created a "Warwick"jardinière, where each side features a landscape in a large painted cartouche: England'sWarwickCastleonone side and children at play on the other (€3,000/5,000).Three decades later, sensitive to the latest trends in the decorative arts,the Gienfactory picked uponArt Nouveaustraight away, as here with a remarkable basin, which was highly acclaimed at the Universal Exhibition of 1900 (€2,000/3,000). "Encouraging living artists who were passionate about earthenware also meant doing our duty as collectors, "saysJean-Marie Jacquet-Gaultier. For example, in 2008, the couple asked the Portuguese artist Manuel Cargaleiro (designer of the famous blue and yellowtilesintheChamps-Élysées metrostation) to make a pair of fuseau vases. Signed, dated and with dedications, they can now be hadfor around €1,500.