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Adelaide Alsop Robineau

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influences in the use of stylized botanical and animal elements. At a time when many noted china painters worked with blanks made by other people, she handled all phases of the process herself, from forming the pots to incising and painting them. Some of the detail work on her pieces was so fine that
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Robineau began seriously making ceramics around 1901, by which time she already had a reputation as a china painter. She became convinced that painting over the glaze — then a common technique — was the wrong approach and began to experiment with other procedures. She worked primarily in porcelain,
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Adelaide Alsop Robineau was arguably the most important single figure in early 20th-century decorative arts. Where most potters and potteries were working in earthenware, she explored the depths and redefined the heights of
163:. As a young woman, she helped to support her family by teaching drawing at the boarding school where she had formerly been a student. During one summer break, she enrolled in the painter 315: 212:. Robineau later built a ceramic studio next to the house. She taught china painting and pottery at her Four Winds Pottery School and sold her painted china, watercolors, and ceramics. 216:
experimenting with American clays to create a true high-fire porcelain. She also experimented with a wide range of forms, decorations, and glazes, with frequent use of multicolored,
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Tapp, Barbara S., ed. "Top Treasures of the Century." Art & Antiques special issue, March 2000.
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In 1899, she married Samuel E. Robineau, a French ceramics expert who was at one time editor of
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magazine named it the most important piece of American ceramics of the last hundred years.
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that now holds the ashes of both Robineau and her husband in Syracuse, New York.
546:"Adelaide Alsop Robineau - A Collection of Thirty-Four Vases and Jars - 1909-28" 209: 160: 89: 664: 673: 240:, a tall, incised porcelain vase that took over 1000 hours to make. In 2000, 236:
Many of Robineau's works are containers, including her most famous work, the
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Group of porcelain vases at a 1913 Chicago Art Institute exhibition, with
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she employed crochet needles and dental tools to get the desired effect.
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Born 1865, Middletown, Connecticut; died 1929, Syracuse, New York
136: 644: 306: 574:"Object of the Week: Adelaide Alsop Robineau's Scarab Vase" 671: 603:"Adelaide Alsop Robineau, Indian Vase, 1913" 631:Adelaide Alsop Robineau: Glory in Porcelain 487:. Vol. 50, no. 1. pp. 57–63. 204:In 1899, Robineau and her husband launched 150: 513:"Adelaide Alsop Robineau, Master Ceramist" 392: 390: 388: 29: 478: 258:Before her death in 1929, she designed a 182:magazine. The couple had three children. 189: 660:, hosted by the Smithsonian Institution 385: 672: 506: 504: 502: 500: 498: 496: 494: 474: 472: 470: 468: 466: 464: 462: 460: 458: 456: 378: 376: 265:Her work is in the collections of the 440: 396: 730:20th-century American women painters 540: 538: 417: 740:People from Middletown, Connecticut 491: 453: 373: 155:Adelaide Alsop was born in 1865 in 139:, and is considered one of the top 13: 665:Missouri Remembers Artist Database 633:. Syracuse University Press, 1981. 623: 479:Shrimpton, Louise (January 1910). 14: 766: 637: 535: 695:Arts and Crafts movement artists 643: 510: 354: 342: 330: 314: 298: 286: 755:Ceramists from New York (state) 700:Artists from Syracuse, New York 735:20th-century American painters 595: 566: 411: 224:glazes. Her mature work shows 1: 725:20th-century American artists 366: 68:Middletown, Connecticut, U.S. 40: 580:. 2018-01-18. Archived from 481:"An Art Potter and Her Home" 397:Kirst, Sean (May 13, 2006). 131:(1865–1929) was an American 77:1929 (aged 63–64) 7: 705:Syracuse University faculty 446:"Adelaide Alsop Robineau". 10: 771: 745:Ceramists from Connecticut 656:Complete digitized set of 418:Rago, David (2016-04-18). 281:, and other institutions. 267:Metropolitan Museum of Art 185: 511:Bell, Barbara Nicholson. 420:"Antiques Roadshow | PBS" 275:Detroit Institute of Arts 118: 108: 95: 85: 73: 50: 28: 21: 750:American women academics 710:American women ceramists 247:Robineau taught at both 151:Early life and education 80:Syracuse, New York, U.S. 650:Adelaide Alsop Robineau 448:Encyclopædia Britannica 424:Antiques Roadshow | PBS 293:Porcelain vase, c. 1905 157:Middletown, Connecticut 129:Adelaide Alsop Robineau 23:Adelaide Alsop Robineau 720:20th-century ceramists 715:American women potters 201: 517:Syracuse Then and Now 271:Everson Museum of Art 242:Art & Antiquities 193: 165:William Merritt Chase 652:at Wikimedia Commons 550:Cranbrook Art Museum 523:on November 22, 2017 361:Porcelain vase, 1928 279:Cranbrook Art Museum 253:Edward Gardner Lewis 145:American art pottery 113:American art pottery 35:Robineau at work on 249:Syracuse University 552:. 17 February 2016 202: 122:Samuel E. Robineau 648:Media related to 485:Good Housekeeping 169:Alfred University 126: 125: 762: 690:American potters 647: 629:Weiss, Peg, ed. 617: 616: 614: 613: 599: 593: 592: 590: 589: 570: 564: 563: 558: 557: 542: 533: 532: 530: 528: 519:. 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Retrieved 423: 413: 404:Syracuse.com 402: 337:Bottle, 1926 322: 309:, c. 1907-08 264: 260:cinerary urn 257: 246: 241: 237: 235: 214: 205: 203: 179: 177: 154: 147:in her era. 128: 127: 101: 97:Notable work 36: 685:1929 deaths 680:1865 births 607:www.dia.org 323:Scarab Vase 238:Scarab Vase 226:Art Nouveau 173:Taxile Doat 102:Scarab Vase 44: 1910 37:Scarab Vase 674:Categories 612:2019-09-05 588:2019-09-05 556:2019-09-05 435:porcelain. 429:2019-09-05 367:References 349:Vase, 1927 305:Vase with 222:iridescent 218:opalescent 200:bowl, 1924 230:Japonisme 195:Porcelain 180:Old China 171:and with 141:ceramists 527:March 9, 198:openwork 109:Movement 450:, 1911. 186:Pottery 60: ( 220:, and 137:potter 119:Spouse 104:, 1910 307:moose 529:2017 228:and 135:and 74:Died 62:1865 58:1865 51:Born 143:of 676:: 605:. 576:. 559:. 548:. 537:^ 515:. 493:^ 483:. 455:^ 432:. 422:. 401:. 387:^ 375:^ 277:, 273:, 269:, 175:. 41:c. 39:, 615:. 591:. 531:. 407:. 64:)

Index


studio pottery
American art pottery
china painter
potter
ceramists
American art pottery
Middletown, Connecticut
china painting
William Merritt Chase
Alfred University
Taxile Doat

Porcelain
openwork
Katharine Budd
opalescent
iridescent
Art Nouveau
Japonisme
Syracuse University
Edward Gardner Lewis
cinerary urn
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
Detroit Institute of Arts
Cranbrook Art Museum
Porcelain vase, c. 1905
Vase with moose, c. 1907-08
moose

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