This is a big year for legendary designer Eva Zeisel as not only  is her work currently the subject of an acclaimed exhibition in  the nation’s capital, but in October, the 98-year-old,  Hungarian-born ceramicist will receive the Smithsonian’s  Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum’s prestigious National Design Award  for lifetime achievement.   The exhibition, “Eva Zeisel: The Playful Search for Beauty,” is  on view at the Hillwood Museum and Gardens through December 4.  The title comes from Zeisel’s comment that her career and designs  are the product of her “playful search for beauty.”   The wide-ranging exhibition, covering all phases of Zeisel’s long  career, is presented in Washington under the patronage of the  Hungarian Ambassador and Mrs Andras Simonyi, and is curated by Dr  Karen L. Kettering, Hillwood’s curator of Russian art. Located on the estate of heiress and collector MarjorieMerriweather Post, the Hillwood Museum boasts the largestcollection of Russian imperial art outside of Russia, as well asFrench decorative arts. Mrs Post’s “Intourist” tea service,designed by Zeisel during her crucial years in the Soviet Union, isa fascinating feature of the exhibition. The show is displayed inHillwood’s replica of a Russian dacha.   Featured are Zeisel’s well-known swooping ceramic bowls and  platters, as well as metal, resin and wood objects. They reflect  the designer’s longtime interest in turning everyday objects into  functional works of art by means of designs emphasizing sinuous  lines and sensuous, rounded forms. The objects document Zeisel’s  career-long commitment to making “beautiful objects available to  everyone.”   They should “feel as good as they look,” the industrial designer  says. Adds Hillwood executive director Frederick J. Fisher, “The  extraordinary popularity of Zeisel’s creations for the modern  home can be traced to her embrace of ornament. Instead of severe  functionalism, Zeisel’s work features abundant, curving, natural  shapes that are playful, yet familiar.”   Eva Zeisel, still actively working in New York, has had a long  and fascinating life that began way back in 1906. Born Eva Amalia  Striker into a prominent Budapest family, she took up painting as  a teenager and was tutored in avant-garde art. After studying for  a time at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts, she left to become an  apprentice to a potter and began to create her own works.   Moving to Germany in 1928, she created imaginative post-Cubist,  geometric designs for ceramics that were highly successful.  Zeisel “began to recognize,” Kettering writes in the exhibition  catalog, “the importance of the sculptural qualities of her work;  particularly the rhythms established when pieces are grouped.” A  1929 photograph shows Zeisel as an exceedingly attractive young  woman with a real sense of clothing fashion design as well.   In 1932, intrigued by the possibilities of what appeared to be a  progressive culture, she moved to the Soviet Union. Working at  the Lomonosov State Porcelain Factory in Leningrad, she  successfully took on the challenge of creating designs for  mass-produced porcelain that met state-mandated standards of  social realism. An intriguing example in the exhibition is the  1933 “Intourist” tea service featuring hand painted views of  Lenin and Leningrad on astutely shaped pieces that could be  inexpensively produced, easily packed and shipped – and were  aesthetically pleasing. For Dulevo, the largest Soviet ceramics factory, Zeiseldesigned numerous objects for mass marketing to both private homesand communal places. Given a freer hand, “the abstract ornament onher designs differs radically from the complex landscapes orfigural painting shown in her ‘Intourist’ service,” Ketteringobserves.   In 1936, out of the blue, Zeisel was arrested and charged with  conspiring to assassinate Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin. Refusing  to sign a phony confession, she was imprisoned for 16 months,  most of them in solitary confinement, before being released and  expelled from the country.   Her recovery in Vienna was aided by her friend Hans Zeisel, a  sociologist whom she married in 1938. Later that year, after  Germany invaded Austria, the Zeisels emigrated to the United  States, settling in New York. Two children were born in the early  1940s.   In this country, Zeisel has been remarkably productive, creating  the work for which she is best known – softly curving ceramics  that combine Surrealist touches with clean modernist designs.  Both her early and her latest designs are displayed in the  exhibition, many for the first time in public.   As Kettering writes, Zeisel “chose to interpret her survival of  Stalin’s terror as a reprieve to which her response, at least in  part, was aesthetic….[Her] will to work and design seem to have  been strengthened by the trauma of imprisonment, dictatorship and  war.”   Hired by Pratt Institute to organize and teach the first course  on ceramic design for mass production in this country, Zeisel and  her students collaborated on a “Stratoware” line of kitchen and  tablewares for Sears, Roe-buck and Co. These glazed earthenware  casserole dishes and other durable, easily stackable pieces were  adapted to modern patterns of eating and thus appealed to  increasingly busy American housewives.   Drawing on her study of Emily Post’s etiquette manual and her  increasing knowledge of the desires of American consumers, in the  early 1940s Zeisel teamed with Castleton China to design an  all-white porcelain dinner service that accented elegant, modern  lines. Shown at the Museum of Modern Art in 1946 – its first solo  exhibition by a woman – her Castleton “museum” pieces established  Ziesel’s American reputation. In 1952, Hall China Company released Zeisel’s “Tomorrow’sClassic” line, mass-marketed tablewares with un-usual oval, squaredand teardrop shapes. Standouts among these intriguing glazedearthenware pieces are a sensuously curved “Sauceboat” that coulddouble as a vase, and evocatively rounded sugar bowls and creamers.   “‘Tomorrow’s Classic,'” says Kettering “became one of the most  popular designs of the Twentieth Century. It was inexpensive –  only $8.95 for a [16-piece] starter set in white – and the  refreshing design…pleased…[a wide variety of] buyers.”   For her highly popular “Town and Country” line of earthenware  serving pieces, manufactured by Red Wing Pottery, Zeisel created  the first asymmetrical tableware in this country. Her softened,  biomorphic designs lent themselves to sculptural groups that  fitted the warmth and intimacy of ideal family life. Among the  most endearing pieces are salt and pepper shakers that Kettering  suggests “recall a mother embracing her child.”   This sense of familial relationships was carried into several  other Zeisel designs in the 1950s, notably for Western Stoneware  Company. A gathering of charming, bird-shaped pieces suggested  interactions among a happy family group.   After a hiatus to conduct historical research and write about her  memories, Zeisel returned to design work with renewed zest in  1983 at the age of 77. In addition to tableware, she ventured  into designs for ceramic garden dividers, fountains, furniture,  lamps and toys.   In the mid-1990s, for the firm Nambe, she created designs for  objects made of a special aluminum-based alloy, including bowls,  platters and vases, based on pieces from her 1952 “Tomorrow’s  Classic” line. The handles on her Nambe bowls and serving bowls  convey a special grace when shown together.   The most spectacular objects in the show are prototypes for  multicolored glazed porcelain modular wall dividers or wall  ornaments, with softened forms suggesting indented belly buttons.  They were produced by the Italian firm Manifattura Mancioli in  1958. Thirty years later, an all-white, terracotta modular screen  was installed in the lobby of the Standard Hotel in Los Angeles. In collaboration with Brooklyn-based KleinReid, starting in1999, Zeisel created a series of upright and pillow porcelain vasesthat were designed not only for practical use but, when garnishedwith flowers, to form sculptural compositions. These pieces,observes Kettering, “took her notion of ‘families’ of objects forthe domestic interior a step further.” Similarly, blue mouth-blowncrystal vases, designed for KleinReid, can be combined intofamilial, sculptural units.   In the 1990s, as part of Mikhail Gorbachev’s reform program, the  Soviet government’s old, trumped-up charges against Zeisel were  overturned and she was declared legally rehabilitated. That  cleared the way for her to return to Russia in 2000 to work with  model makers at the newly privatized Lomonosov Porcelain Factory  in St Petersburg (formerly Leningrad) on the prototype of a table  service made of a fine, translucent bone china. The delicate  quality of the bone china permitted Zeisel to create forms that  are at once joyful and transparent. Hillwood is the first museum  to acquire and exhibit the new limited-edition service in full.   According to Kettering, in her late 90s, “Zeisel continues to  design at a whirlwind pace, always seeking out new projects and  new challenges….[A]lthough she was witness to some of the  Twentieth Century’s greatest horrors,” she adheres to her  philosophy that designs can convey joy, playfulness and  happiness.   Little wonder that Eva Zeisel’s sensuous, curving and comforting  forms have earned her the lofty Cooper-Hewitt award for “profound  and long-term contribution to design,” and that her work  continues to attract new legions of admirers.   The exhibition is accompanied by a brief, 29-page, illustrated  catalog, written by Kettering, that is informative and  insightful. In conjunction with the show, Hillwood’s Museum Shop  is carrying Zeisel-designed objects and wares manufactured by Geo  Art, KleinReid, Marinha Grande Glass and Nambe. Crate &  Barrel stores also feature a new line of Zeisel dinnerware,  reissued as “Century Classic,” using molds from the 1950s.   Hillwood Museum & Gardens is at 4155 Linnean Avenue, NW.  Reservations are required; call 877-HILLWOOD or visit  www.hillwoodmuseum.org.          
 
    



 
						