Stand for Perpetual Vine Cup
1965
Kenneth F. Bates
Kenneth F. Bates (American, Cleveland, 1904–1994)
Decorative Art and Design
Stand for Perpetual Vine Cup, 1965. Kenneth F. Bates (American, Cleveland, 1904–1994). Silver; The Cleveland Museum of Art, Bequest of Marie Odenkirk Clark 1972.1195.b Kenneth Bates spent a lifetime devoted to the art of enameling. He taught several generations of students at the Cleveland Institute of Art, who subsequently became renowned enamelists, and created a spectacular body of work that won him international accolades. This small, luxurious cup typifies the skill and technical prowess of Bates's talent. Featuring the cloisonné enamel technique known as plique-à-jour, in which the enamel is applied in cells with no backing, the cup seemingly exists with no structure, held aloft only by the tiny silver arms of its stand. The translucent enamel lets the light permeate as a stained glass window would in a church. The effect is ethereal and impressionistic, and in this way, recalls the work of the masters of this art from the early 1900s, René Lalique and Fernand Thesmar. This stand is hand wrought from silver.
- Maker/Artist
- Bates, Kenneth F.
- Classification
- Enamel
- Formatted Medium
- silver
- Medium
- silver
- Departments
- Decorative Art and Design
- Accession Number
- 1972.1195.b
- Credit Line
- Bequest of Marie Odenkirk Clark
- Exhibitions
- The May Show: 46th Annual Exhibition of Works by Artists and Craftsmen of The Western Reserve, Painting with Fire: Masters of Enameling in America, 1930-1980, In Honor of The Cleveland Arts Prize, May Show, 1964, Jury Mention<br>Long Beach Museum of Art, CA (1/12/2007 - 8/19/2007): "Painting with Fire: Masters of Enameling in America, 1930-1980"<br><br>The Cleveland Museum of Art (06/13/2010 - 11/4/2010): "In Honor of the Cleveland Arts Prize"
- Rights Statement
- Copyrighted
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