E V A Z E I S E L D E S I G N
When
you sit down at a table set with an array of cups, bowls, plates, and platters
designed by Eva Zesiel, you are in the presence of a transcendent utilitarianism.
Zeisel's dinner plate holds a main dish. Cream pours from her creamer. But
there's much more going on here. A surprise tilt or shift from circle to oval
gives that dinner plate an aura of unconventionality, of lyricism, of drama.
And as you pick up the creamer, you notice that the spout leans toward your
coffee cup in an especially friendly, even seductive way, almost as if a little
conversation were about to begin.
.There
are elements of the magician, the poet, and the joker in everything that Eva
Zeisel does. Seeing her objects next to one another, I know that stories are
unfolding. Zeisel is a philosopher of the table top; she imagines all the
relationships that can develop in a community of forms. The connections that
she establishes among a dinner plate, a salad plate, and a butter dish suggest
evolutionary changes. Zeisel creates relationships that feel organic, but
she gives those relationships a phantasmagorical dimension. She turns table
settings into magical kingdoms. And as if that weren't enough, in recent years
she has started to design the tables. And there are room dividers. And shelves.
And chairs.
.From
the quirky geometry of the work that she did in Germany in the late 1920's,
through the sensuously elegant Hallcraft dinnerware of the 1950's, all the
way to some of the romantically gleaming vases of recent years, Zeisel time
and time again has achieved fullness without excess. Born in Budapest in 1906,
she worked in Germany and in Russia before emigrating to the United Staes
in 1938. Here she became a leader in industrial ceramics, one of the key figures
during the postwar boom in experimentation. She had a one-woman exhibition
at the Museum of Modern Art in 1946. She taught several generations of designers
at Pratt Institute. A 1984 retrospective organized by the Musee des Arts Decoratifs
in Montreal subsequently toured the United States.
.Eva
Zeisel has been no stranger to the social upheavals of this century, and she
has responded by inventing forms and families of forms that crystallize the
tastes and manners of different decades and, indeed, of two different continents.
She has an intuitive period sense, so that certain of her designs can seem
to epitomize the spirit of the ,30s, the '40s, the '50s, and even the '80s.
Yet there is obviously something more than intuition involved in the staying
power of her images. Zeisel has a strategist's synthesizing imagination. When
she designs a coffee set or a dinner service she is marshaling her forces.
In smaller projects, she romances the practicalities. At other times, she
sets in motion epic mealtime narratives. The dinner service which she designed
for Hallcraft is beguilingly Homeric in its variety of forms and its serried
forces.
.Part
of what has always been so appealing about Zeisel's work is her iconoclastic
view of what modern design-and, indeed, modern life-is all about. She celebrates
the voluptuous and fantastical. She gives us a winking, twinkling, seductive
modernity. She's not afraid of our half-submerged rococo or baroque impulses.
She believes that even the form that follows the function can dance a little
gavotte. There's some of the good old Bauhaus spirit to what Zeisel does.
In her belief that quality industrial design can be delivered to an ever-growing
population, she is absolutely a figure of her time. But there's also an undercurrent
of Biedermeier elegance and comfort that permeates these forms. Zeisel's work
is so rich and so varied that it quite naturally defies summary. Perhaps this
is why her achievement has not yet been fully understood. What better time
than right now, at the end of a great century of design, to come to grips
with the accomplishments of this woman whose name begins with a Z?