Item No. :KAGE037
Designer:Wilhelm Kåge
Maker:Gustavsberg
Size :H:235mm W:71mm D:82mm
A vase from Wilhelm Kåge’s Surrea series.
Surrea was first introduced in 1940 as a group of unique pieces in Panik och idyll i brännugnen, an exhibition held at the Stockholm department store NK. Based on formal experiments Kåge had pursued since the late 1930s, the series brought into ceramics a displacement of perspective reminiscent of Cubism and Surrealism, achieved by dismantling vessels and recombining their parts into new forms.
This example belongs to the group of series works Kåge returned to in 1953. In these pieces, a single vessel was cut apart and reassembled with its parts shifted out of alignment, preserving the outline of a vessel while reconstructing it as a sculptural form.
Made in stoneware with a matte white Carrara glaze, it has a restrained surface that allows the shadows created by the displaced planes to bring the reconstructed form into sharper relief.
* In good condition with no noticeable damage.
Wilhelm Kåge was one of the key artist-designers who laid the foundations of modern design in Sweden. After studying painting and drawing at several art schools, he came to prominence around 1914 as a poster artist and went on to work extensively in advertising and graphic design. At the time, the Swedish Society of Industrial Design was encouraging manufacturers to engage artists in order to raise the quality of industrial products, and Kåge—already recognized for his work in poster design—was recommended as someone capable of bringing the decorative sensibility he had developed in graphic design to tableware. In 1917, he was invited to join Gustavsberg.
At Gustavsberg, he worked to renew the company’s tableware. At the Stockholm Exhibition of 1930, which marked the beginning of functionalism in the Nordic countries, he introduced Pyro, a heat-resistant tableware series designed to go directly from oven to table. In 1933, he designed Praktika, a series that pursued stackable storage and rational form, making a major contribution to the development of modern tableware in Sweden.
Alongside his tableware designs, he also worked in art ceramics. In 1930, he introduced the Argenta series, characterized by green glaze with silver decoration. Combining hand-painted craftsmanship with serial production, Argenta became one of Gustavsberg’s most celebrated art ceramic lines and enjoyed wide popularity both in Sweden and abroad. That same year, he also launched Farstagods, which became the core of his artistic practice. Pursuing freer form and glaze expression, and carrying out the finishing and glazing himself, he continued to produce these uncompromising works throughout his life.
In 1942, Gustavsberg Studio was established, growing out of the Kåge department. Marked by the emblem Kåge had designed—a hand set within the letter G—the Studio provided a space for independent artistic production within the factory. There, Kåge, along with figures such as Stig Lindberg and Berndt Friberg, was able to pursue individual work in an environment shaped for artistic freedom. Through the production of art ceramics and faience, the Studio became an important center for Gustavsberg’s artistic output.
Kåge also maintained a deep interest in Chinese ceramics and in Japanese folk craft, and his lifelong work reflects a sustained engagement with the relationship between material, glaze, and form. In 1952, Shoji Hamada and Soetsu Yanagi visited Gustavsberg, and in 1956 Kåge himself traveled to Japan, staying with Hamada in Mashiko. These encounters led to a profound and lasting exchange with Japanese ceramic culture.
His many honors include two Grand Prix awards at the 1925 Paris Exposition and the Prince Eugen Medal, awarded by the King of Sweden in 1949 for outstanding artistic achievement.
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This is a vintage / pre-owned item. We take great care in our sourcing and select only pieces in good condition.
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