Red and White Roses Vase

Ceramic

-

anonymous...

Name/Title

Red and White Roses Vase

Entry/Object ID

2009.72

Category

American Art, 1800 to 1945, Ceramics

Acquisition

Accession

2009.72

Source or Donor

Ted Barr

Acquisition Method

Purchase

Credit Line

Crocker Art Museum, Melza and Ted Barr Collection

Notes

Crocker Art Museum, Melza and Ted Barr Collection

Made/Created

Artist

Franz A. Bischoff

Date made

1908

Time Period

20th Century

Place

Location

America, North America

Lexicon

Legacy Lexicon

Object Name

Web-Tag-California Artists, Web-Tag-Flowers and Plants

Dimensions

Height

15 in

Width

8 in

Materials

Material

Porcelain

Material Notes

Mineral pigments on porcelain

Location

Category

Display

Category

Display

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Website Medium

Label

Porcelain

General Notes

Note Type

Historical Note

Note

Well known in the American East for his exquisite porcelains profusely decorated with roses, Austrian-born Franz Bischoff built a home and studio in the Arroyo Seco area of Pasadena in 1908. There, he planted flowers, which provided models for his china painting and also the new oils that increasingly occupied his attention. Bischoff began his china-painting career as an apprentice in Bavaria. At eighteen, he went to Vienna where he pursued additional training in painting, design, and ceramic decoration. He arrived in New York in August 1885 and took a job as a decorator in a china factory. He also worked in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, New Bedford Massachusetts, and Fostoria, Ohio, where on May 24, 1890, he married. Bischoff then accepted an invitation to join the china painting studio of Mary Leicester Wagner, and he and his new wife relocated to Detroit, Michigan. Shortly thereafter, he moved to nearby Dearborn, where he taught china decorating and watercolor painting and produced elaborately painted porcelains. Formulating and manufacturing many of his own colors, he won numerous awards and earned a reputation as the King of the Rose Painters.