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Old Paris Inkwell, France, circa 1900
$940
£711.96
€817.66
CA$1,317.25
A$1,432.11
CHF 759.31
MX$17,167.41
NOK 9,650.42
SEK 8,841.09
DKK 6,111.01
About the Item
Old Paris Inkwell, France, circa 1900. Art Nouveau foliate design. White porcelain with hand gilt outlines. Original metal inkwells.
- Attributed to:Old Paris (Manufacturer)
- Dimensions:Height: 2.75 in (6.99 cm)Width: 12 in (30.48 cm)Depth: 12 in (30.48 cm)
- Style:Art Nouveau (Of the Period)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:circa 1900
- Condition:Wear consistent with age and use.
- Seller Location:Chappaqua, NY
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU1150239252392
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This inkwell is a collectible example of French ceramic art at the turn of the century—perfect for collectors of Art Nouveau, 19th-century French ceramics, or the works of Dalpayrat.
Adrien Dalpayrat (1844–1910): A Pioneer of French Ceramic Innovation
Adrien Dalpayrat was a French ceramicist and researcher who played a key role in the revival of stoneware at the end of the 19th century. Born in 1844 in Limoges, Dalpayrat studied drawing and porcelain painting in his hometown before beginning his professional career at the Jules Vieillard faience factory in Bordeaux. There, he met his wife, Marie Tallerie, with whom he had two sons—Albert and Adolphe—who would later become his primary collaborators.
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Japanese art had been introduced to France during the 1867 Universal Exhibition, but it wasn’t until the 1878 Exhibition, particularly through the ceremonial stoneware used in the Japanese tea ceremony, that Japonism truly captivated French artists. This influence led Dalpayrat to create vessels with organic, vegetal, and animal-inspired forms.
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Among all the ceramists of his time who sought to replicate the elusive Chinese “sang de boeuf” (oxblood) glaze, Adrien Dalpayrat was arguably the most successful. He didn’t simply reproduce the legendary copper red—he transformed it. By manipulating glaze thickness, firing temperature, atmosphere, and copper oxide content, he developed a unique palette of flamed and mottled red glazes that became his signature: the renowned Dalpayrat red.
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Dalpayrat also collaborated with renowned jewelers such as Ernest Cardeilhac and Keller to produce pieces mounted in gilt bronze, blending ceramics with decorative arts at the highest level.
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Gold medal, Exposition Universelle, Paris (1900)
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