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Eva Zeisel

Eva Striker Zeisel[2] (born Éva Amália Striker,[3] November 13, 1906 – December 30, 2011) was a Hungarian-born American industrial designer known for her work with ceramics, primarily from the period after she immigrated to the United States. Her forms are often abstractions of the natural world and human relationships.[4] Work from throughout her prodigious career is included in important museum collections across the world. Zeisel declared herself a "maker of useful things."[4]

Eva Zeisel
Born(1906-11-13)November 13, 1906
Budapest, Hungary
DiedDecember 30, 2011(2011-12-30) (aged 105)[1]
OccupationIndustrial designer

Biography

Early life and family

She was born in Budapest, Hungary, in 1906[5] to a wealthy, highly educated assimilated Jewish family. Her mother, Laura Polányi Striker, a historian, was the first woman to get a PhD from the University of Budapest. Laura's work on Captain John Smith's adventures in Hungary added fundamentally to our understanding and appreciation of his reliability as a narrator. Laura's brothers, Karl Polanyi, the sociologist and economist, and Michael Polanyi, the physical chemist and philosopher of science, are also very well known.[6]

Education

Despite her family's intellectual prominence in the field of science, Striker always felt a deep attraction towards art. At 17, Zeisel entered Budapest's Magyar Képzőművészeti Akadémia (Hungarian Royal Academy of Fine Arts)[7] as a painter.[5] To support her painting, she decided to pursue a more practical profession and apprenticed herself to Jakob Karapancsik, the last pottery master in the medieval guild system. From him she learned ceramics. She was the first woman to qualify as a journeyman in the Hungarian Guild of Chimney Sweeps, Oven Makers, Roof Tilers, Well Diggers, and Potters.[8] After graduating as a journeyman she found work at the Hansa-Kust-Keramik, a ceramic workshop in Hamburg, Germany.[5]

Early career, imprisonment, and emigration

In 1928, Striker became the designer for the Schramberger Majolikafabrik in the Black Forest region of Germany where she worked for about two years creating many playfully geometric designs for dinnerware, tea sets, vases, inkwells and other ceramic items. Her designs at Schramberg were largely influenced by modern architecture.[9] In addition, she had just learned to draft with compass and ruler and was proud to put them to use. In 1930, Eva moved to Berlin, designing for the Carstens factories. During this period, Striker met the physicist Alexander Weissberg, who later worked in Kharkov. In 1932 they became engaged.

After almost two years of a glamorous life among intellectuals and artists in decadent Berlin, Striker decided to visit the Soviet Union at the age of 26 (1932).[5] She stayed for 5 years.

At the age of 29, after several jobs in the Russian ceramics industry—inspecting factories in Ukraine as well as designing for the Lomonosov[5] and Dulevo factories—Striker was named artistic director of the Russian China and Glass Trust.[10] On May 26, 1936, while living in Moscow, Striker was arrested. She had been falsely accused of participating in an assassination plot against Joseph Stalin.[5] She was held in prison for 16 months, 12 of which were spent in solitary confinement.[4] In September 1937, she was deported to Vienna, Austria. Some of her prison experiences form the basis for Darkness at Noon, the anti-Stalinist novel written by her childhood friend, Arthur Koestler.[5] It was while in Vienna that she re-established contact with her future husband Hans Zeisel, later a legal scholar, statistician, and professor at The University of Chicago. A few months after her arrival in Vienna the Nazis invaded, and Striker took the last train out. She and Hans met up in England where they married and sailed for the US with $67 between them.

 
Zeisel's Castleton "Museum" dinnerware series commissioned by MoMA in 1942.

US career, 1937–1960s

When Eva Zeisel arrived in the US, she had to reestablish her reputation as a designer. Beginning in 1937, she taught at Pratt Institute in New York.[5] She and her students created designs for the Bay Ridge Specialty Company including Stratoware (a rare, short-lived line made for Sears), designed by student Frances Blod, under Eva's supervision.[11]

 
Some of Zeisel's ceramic pieces designed for Red Wing Pottery's "Town and Country" dinner service (1947). This set includes a "mother and child" salt and pepper shakers, and a baby oil pourer that exemplify her organic, curving forms.[12][13]

In 1942, Zeisel was commissioned by the Museum of Modern Art and Castleton China to design a set of modern, porcelain, undecorated china that would be worthy of exhibition at MoMA, to be produced for sale by Castleton. The resulting exhibition, "New Shapes in Modern China Designed by Eva Zeisel," ran from April 17 to June 9, 1946, and was the first one-woman exhibition at MoMA. It was received with wide praise, but because of wartime constraints the porcelain dishware did not go into production until 1949. Zeisel's dishes, known as "Museum" and "Castleton White," were manufactured and sold over the next several decades, initially in all-white as designed by Zeisel, and later with a wide variety of decorations. Zeisel credited this commission with establishing her reputation in the US, remarking that, "it made me an accepted first-rate designer rather than a run-of-the-mill designer."[14]

"Museum's" success brought Zeisel to the attention of Red Wing Potteries, for whom she designed the perennially popular "Town and Country" in response to their request for dishes as "Greenwich-Villagey" as possible (see photo).[14]

Around 1949–1950, Zeisel was commissioned by the Hall China Company to create her most popular line, "Hallcraft, Tomorrow's Classic." Production began in 1952 and was a full line of dinnerware and tableware accessories, including plates, bowls, cups and saucers, serving platters and bowls, butter dishes, sugar bowls and creamers, candleholders, salt and pepper shakers, etc., initially intended to be offered in plain white. Some of her Pratt student-assistants were involved in designing the initial decal patterns that Hall requested. Other patterns were designed by the painter Charles Seliger.

In 1955, Zeisel created a second line for Hall called "Century" with production beginning in 1956. In the late 1950s she designed for several international companies including Rosenthal AG, and Mancioli Pottery.

Later career, 1980s–2011

Zeisel stopped designing during the 1960s and 1970s, to work on American history writing projects. Her major research focused on the New York Conspiracy, an alleged slave rebellion in 1741 New York City which resulted in many innocent slaves being put to death or transported to plantations in the Caribbean. Zeisel found parallels between their trials and the Soviet show trials of which she had been a victim.

She returned to design work in the 1980s.[15] Many of her later designs have found the same success as her earlier designs. These include glassware, ceramics, furniture and lamps for The Orange Chicken, porcelain, crystal and limited-edition prints for KleinReid, glasses and giftware for Nambé, a teakettle for Chantal, furniture and gift-ware for Eva Zeisel Originals, rugs for The Rug Company, “Classic-Century," one of Crate and Barrel’s best selling dinner services, produced by Royal Stafford, UK. This set combines pieces from the "Tomorrow's Classic" and "Century" lines. ("Classic-Century is now sold by EvaZeiselOriginals.com) Most of the pieces for this set were made from the original molds (dishwasher safe). She also created a line of flatware produced by Yamazaki for Crate And Barrel, and a coffee table and stoneware / dinnerware set (called Granit) for Design Within Reach.

A bone china tea set, designed in 2000, is manufactured by the Lomonosov Porcelain factory in St. Petersburg, Russia. Zeisel released two designs in 2010 through EvaZeiselOriginals.com: Eva Zeisel Lounge Chair and Eva Zeisel Salt & Pepper Shakers. The Lounge Chair was featured in the February 2010 issue of O Magazine and The S&P shakers were featured in the April 2010 issue of O Magazine. Her new designs for a line of glass lamps (pendant, wall and table lamps) was introduced in 2012 by Leucos USA.

In 2017 Spinneybeck/FilzFelt introduced a collection of felt, acoustic wall tiles based on Zeisel's tile and space divider designs. They come in 63 colors, and custom sizes.

Reproductions of earlier designs have been sold at MoMa, Brooklyn Museum and Neue Galerie, as well as other museum gift shops.

Personal style

Eva Zeisel's designs are made for use. The inspiration for her sensuous forms often comes from the curves of the human body. Her sense of form and color, as well as her use of bird themes, show influence from the Hungarian folk arts she grew up with.[16] Most of Zeisel’s designs, whether in wood, metal, glass, plastic or ceramics, are designed in family groups. Many of her designs nest together creating modular designs that also function to save space.

Zeisel describes her designs in a New York Sun article: “I don’t create angular things. I’m a more circular person—it’s more my character….even the air between my hands is round.”[17]

Among her most collected shapes are the eccentric, biomorphic "Town and Country" dishes, produced by Red Wing Pottery, in 1947.[18] This set includes the iconic "mother and child" salt and pepper shakers.

Personal life

Eva Zeisel raised two children with Hans: a daughter, Jean Richards, who was born in 1940 and a son, John Zeisel, who was born in 1944. In the documentary Throwing Curves: Eva Zeisel, John and Jean comment on their parents' tempestuous relationship in the 1940s and 1950s when the children were young. In the film, John claims that both Hans and Eva had dominant personalities, and that this often led to "a collision of forcefields".[19]

Museums and exhibitions

Zeisel's works are in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum; Brooklyn Museum; New-York Historical Society, Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum and The Museum of Modern Art,[20] New York; the British Museum; The Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Bröhan Museum, Germany; as well as Dallas, Chicago, Atlanta and Milwaukee museums and others in the US and abroad.

In the 1980s, a 50-year retrospective exhibit of her work organized by Musée des Arts Décoratifs and the Smithsonian Institution traveled through the US, Europe and Russia. In 2004, a significant retrospective exhibition "Eva Zeisel: The Playful Search for Beauty" was organized by the Knoxville Museum of Art, which subsequently traveled to the Milwaukee Art Museum, the High Museum of Art, Atlanta, and the Hillwood Museum & Gardens, Washington, D.C.

From 2005 to 2007, the Erie Art Museum, Erie, PA, mounted the long-term exhibition "Eva Zeisel: The Shape of Life."

On December 10, 2006, The Mingei International Museum in Balboa Park, San Diego, opened a major centenary retrospective exhibit , showing her designs from Schramberg (1928) through more recent designs for Nambe, Chantal, Eva Zeisel Originals, The Orange Chicken, and others (2006). The show ran through August 12, 2007. In the same year, the Pratt Institute Gallery also organized an Exhibition celebrating her centenary.

Awards

In 2005, Zeisel won the Lifetime Achievement award from the Cooper-Hewett National Design Museum.[21] She received the two highest civilian awards from the Hungarian government, as well as the Pratt Legends award and awards from the Industrial Designers Society of America and Alfred University. She was an honorary member of the Royal Society of Industrial Designers, and received honorary degrees from Parsons (New School), Rhode Island School of Design, the Royal College of Art, and the Hungarian University of the Arts.

Publications

  • Eva Zeisel: The Shape of Life Erie Art Museum, 2009, essay by Lance Esplund
  • Eva Zeisel on Design by Eva Zeisel, Overlook Press 2004
  • Eva Zeisel: The Playful Search for Beauty by Lucie Young, Chronicle Books 2003
  • Eva Zeisel, Designer for Industry, 1984 (Out of print. Available through Eva Zeisel Forum).
  • Eva Zeisel: Throwing Curves 2002 (documentary film), Canobie Films, Director: Jyll Johnstone.
  • Regular Bulletins from Eva Zeisel Forum.
  • Richards, Jean, ed. 2012, 2019. Eva Zeisel: A Soviet Prison Memoir. 2n edition. iBook version contains photos, original NKVD documents, audio and video clips; Kindle version and Kindle paperback, text only.
  • Pat Kirkham, Pat Moore, and Pirco Wolfframm. 2013. Eva Zeisel: Life, Design, and Beauty. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. Complete works.
  • Zelinsky, Volker. 2019. Eva Zeisel in Hamburg: Her Work For Hansa-Kunst-Keramik, 1927/28. Edition Kakenhan: Hamburg. 49pp, 40 illus.

References

  1. ^ Hamilton, William L. (31 December 2011). "Eva Zeisel, Ceramic Artist and Designer, Dies at 105". The New York Times.
  2. ^ "Re: Road Warrior". The New Yorker. January 18, 2010. p. 5.
  3. ^ . Royal Stafford. Archived from the original on 2012-01-02. Retrieved 2011-12-31.
  4. ^ a b c Thurman, Judith (December 18, 2006). "Prolific". The New Yorker.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h "Eva S. Zeisel". Collections. Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2012-11-27.
  7. ^ The Eva Zeisel Forum; www.evazeisel.org
  8. ^ Butler, Cornelia. Modern Women: Women Artists at the Museum of Modern Art. New York: Museum of Modern Art.
  9. ^ Young, Lucie (c. 2003). Eva Zeisel. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. p. 11. ISBN 0811834336.
  10. ^ Young, Lucie (c. 2003). Eva Zeisel. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. p. 14. ISBN 0811834336.
  11. ^ Kirkham, Moore, and Wolffram, Pat, Pat, and Pirco (2013). Eva Zeisel: Life, Design, and Beauty. San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books. pp. 66–73, 76, 222. ISBN 9781452108520.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ "Brooklyn Museum". www.brooklynmuseum.org. Retrieved 2017-04-04.
  13. ^ "Brooklyn Museum". www.brooklynmuseum.org. Retrieved 2017-04-04.
  14. ^ a b Moore, Pat; Wolfframm, Pirco (15 October 2013). Eva Zeisel: Life, Design, and Beauty. San Francisco, CA. p. 68. ISBN 9781452108520.
  15. ^ Traubman, Eleanor; Meeting Eva Zeisel; January 13, 2007,
  16. ^ McGee, Celia (March 2007). "Eva's Ardor". Departures Magazine.
  17. ^ Herrup, Katharine; A Potter, a Pioneer, A Candlestick Maker; The New York Sun, At Home Section, March 3, 2007
  18. ^ Wroten, Timothy. "Remembering New York Designer Eva Zeisel". Behind the Scenes Blog. The New-York Historical Society. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
  19. ^ . www.canobiefilms.org. Archived from the original on 2009-08-31. Retrieved 2009-09-03.
  20. ^ "Designing Modern Women 1890–1990 | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2022-12-11.
  21. ^ . Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum. Archived from the original on 2010-09-26. Retrieved 2010-08-22.

External links

  • New York Times Obituary
  • Eva Zeisel Forum
  • Eva Zeisel Originals
  • New York State College of Ceramics
  • Eva Zeisel at TED  
  • Eva Zeisel Tile Design Session on YouTube
  • Eva Zeisel holdings in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York

zeisel, striker, zeisel, born, Éva, amália, striker, november, 1906, december, 2011, hungarian, born, american, industrial, designer, known, work, with, ceramics, primarily, from, period, after, immigrated, united, states, forms, often, abstractions, natural, . Eva Striker Zeisel 2 born Eva Amalia Striker 3 November 13 1906 December 30 2011 was a Hungarian born American industrial designer known for her work with ceramics primarily from the period after she immigrated to the United States Her forms are often abstractions of the natural world and human relationships 4 Work from throughout her prodigious career is included in important museum collections across the world Zeisel declared herself a maker of useful things 4 Eva ZeiselBorn 1906 11 13 November 13 1906Budapest HungaryDiedDecember 30 2011 2011 12 30 aged 105 1 New City New York USOccupationIndustrial designer Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and family 1 2 Education 1 3 Early career imprisonment and emigration 1 4 US career 1937 1960s 1 5 Later career 1980s 2011 2 Personal style 3 Personal life 4 Museums and exhibitions 5 Awards 6 Publications 7 References 8 External linksBiography EditEarly life and family Edit She was born in Budapest Hungary in 1906 5 to a wealthy highly educated assimilated Jewish family Her mother Laura Polanyi Striker a historian was the first woman to get a PhD from the University of Budapest Laura s work on Captain John Smith s adventures in Hungary added fundamentally to our understanding and appreciation of his reliability as a narrator Laura s brothers Karl Polanyi the sociologist and economist and Michael Polanyi the physical chemist and philosopher of science are also very well known 6 Education Edit Despite her family s intellectual prominence in the field of science Striker always felt a deep attraction towards art At 17 Zeisel entered Budapest s Magyar Kepzomuveszeti Akademia Hungarian Royal Academy of Fine Arts 7 as a painter 5 To support her painting she decided to pursue a more practical profession and apprenticed herself to Jakob Karapancsik the last pottery master in the medieval guild system From him she learned ceramics She was the first woman to qualify as a journeyman in the Hungarian Guild of Chimney Sweeps Oven Makers Roof Tilers Well Diggers and Potters 8 After graduating as a journeyman she found work at the Hansa Kust Keramik a ceramic workshop in Hamburg Germany 5 Early career imprisonment and emigration Edit In 1928 Striker became the designer for the Schramberger Majolikafabrik in the Black Forest region of Germany where she worked for about two years creating many playfully geometric designs for dinnerware tea sets vases inkwells and other ceramic items Her designs at Schramberg were largely influenced by modern architecture 9 In addition she had just learned to draft with compass and ruler and was proud to put them to use In 1930 Eva moved to Berlin designing for the Carstens factories During this period Striker met the physicist Alexander Weissberg who later worked in Kharkov In 1932 they became engaged After almost two years of a glamorous life among intellectuals and artists in decadent Berlin Striker decided to visit the Soviet Union at the age of 26 1932 5 She stayed for 5 years At the age of 29 after several jobs in the Russian ceramics industry inspecting factories in Ukraine as well as designing for the Lomonosov 5 and Dulevo factories Striker was named artistic director of the Russian China and Glass Trust 10 On May 26 1936 while living in Moscow Striker was arrested She had been falsely accused of participating in an assassination plot against Joseph Stalin 5 She was held in prison for 16 months 12 of which were spent in solitary confinement 4 In September 1937 she was deported to Vienna Austria Some of her prison experiences form the basis for Darkness at Noon the anti Stalinist novel written by her childhood friend Arthur Koestler 5 It was while in Vienna that she re established contact with her future husband Hans Zeisel later a legal scholar statistician and professor at The University of Chicago A few months after her arrival in Vienna the Nazis invaded and Striker took the last train out She and Hans met up in England where they married and sailed for the US with 67 between them Zeisel s Castleton Museum dinnerware series commissioned by MoMA in 1942 US career 1937 1960s Edit When Eva Zeisel arrived in the US she had to reestablish her reputation as a designer Beginning in 1937 she taught at Pratt Institute in New York 5 She and her students created designs for the Bay Ridge Specialty Company including Stratoware a rare short lived line made for Sears designed by student Frances Blod under Eva s supervision 11 Some of Zeisel s ceramic pieces designed for Red Wing Pottery s Town and Country dinner service 1947 This set includes a mother and child salt and pepper shakers and a baby oil pourer that exemplify her organic curving forms 12 13 In 1942 Zeisel was commissioned by the Museum of Modern Art and Castleton China to design a set of modern porcelain undecorated china that would be worthy of exhibition at MoMA to be produced for sale by Castleton The resulting exhibition New Shapes in Modern China Designed by Eva Zeisel ran from April 17 to June 9 1946 and was the first one woman exhibition at MoMA It was received with wide praise but because of wartime constraints the porcelain dishware did not go into production until 1949 Zeisel s dishes known as Museum and Castleton White were manufactured and sold over the next several decades initially in all white as designed by Zeisel and later with a wide variety of decorations Zeisel credited this commission with establishing her reputation in the US remarking that it made me an accepted first rate designer rather than a run of the mill designer 14 Museum s success brought Zeisel to the attention of Red Wing Potteries for whom she designed the perennially popular Town and Country in response to their request for dishes as Greenwich Villagey as possible see photo 14 Around 1949 1950 Zeisel was commissioned by the Hall China Company to create her most popular line Hallcraft Tomorrow s Classic Production began in 1952 and was a full line of dinnerware and tableware accessories including plates bowls cups and saucers serving platters and bowls butter dishes sugar bowls and creamers candleholders salt and pepper shakers etc initially intended to be offered in plain white Some of her Pratt student assistants were involved in designing the initial decal patterns that Hall requested Other patterns were designed by the painter Charles Seliger In 1955 Zeisel created a second line for Hall called Century with production beginning in 1956 In the late 1950s she designed for several international companies including Rosenthal AG and Mancioli Pottery Later career 1980s 2011 Edit Zeisel stopped designing during the 1960s and 1970s to work on American history writing projects Her major research focused on the New York Conspiracy an alleged slave rebellion in 1741 New York City which resulted in many innocent slaves being put to death or transported to plantations in the Caribbean Zeisel found parallels between their trials and the Soviet show trials of which she had been a victim She returned to design work in the 1980s 15 Many of her later designs have found the same success as her earlier designs These include glassware ceramics furniture and lamps for The Orange Chicken porcelain crystal and limited edition prints for KleinReid glasses and giftware for Nambe a teakettle for Chantal furniture and gift ware for Eva Zeisel Originals rugs for The Rug Company Classic Century one of Crate and Barrel s best selling dinner services produced by Royal Stafford UK This set combines pieces from the Tomorrow s Classic and Century lines Classic Century is now sold by EvaZeiselOriginals com Most of the pieces for this set were made from the original molds dishwasher safe She also created a line of flatware produced by Yamazaki for Crate And Barrel and a coffee table and stoneware dinnerware set called Granit for Design Within Reach A bone china tea set designed in 2000 is manufactured by the Lomonosov Porcelain factory in St Petersburg Russia Zeisel released two designs in 2010 through EvaZeiselOriginals com Eva Zeisel Lounge Chair and Eva Zeisel Salt amp Pepper Shakers The Lounge Chair was featured in the February 2010 issue of O Magazine and The S amp P shakers were featured in the April 2010 issue of O Magazine Her new designs for a line of glass lamps pendant wall and table lamps was introduced in 2012 by Leucos USA In 2017 Spinneybeck FilzFelt introduced a collection of felt acoustic wall tiles based on Zeisel s tile and space divider designs They come in 63 colors and custom sizes Reproductions of earlier designs have been sold at MoMa Brooklyn Museum and Neue Galerie as well as other museum gift shops Personal style EditEva Zeisel s designs are made for use The inspiration for her sensuous forms often comes from the curves of the human body Her sense of form and color as well as her use of bird themes show influence from the Hungarian folk arts she grew up with 16 Most of Zeisel s designs whether in wood metal glass plastic or ceramics are designed in family groups Many of her designs nest together creating modular designs that also function to save space Zeisel describes her designs in a New York Sun article I don t create angular things I m a more circular person it s more my character even the air between my hands is round 17 Among her most collected shapes are the eccentric biomorphic Town and Country dishes produced by Red Wing Pottery in 1947 18 This set includes the iconic mother and child salt and pepper shakers Personal life EditEva Zeisel raised two children with Hans a daughter Jean Richards who was born in 1940 and a son John Zeisel who was born in 1944 In the documentary Throwing Curves Eva Zeisel John and Jean comment on their parents tempestuous relationship in the 1940s and 1950s when the children were young In the film John claims that both Hans and Eva had dominant personalities and that this often led to a collision of forcefields 19 Museums and exhibitions EditZeisel s works are in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum Brooklyn Museum New York Historical Society Cooper Hewitt Design Museum and The Museum of Modern Art 20 New York the British Museum The Victoria and Albert Museum London Brohan Museum Germany as well as Dallas Chicago Atlanta and Milwaukee museums and others in the US and abroad In the 1980s a 50 year retrospective exhibit of her work organized by Musee des Arts Decoratifs and the Smithsonian Institution traveled through the US Europe and Russia In 2004 a significant retrospective exhibition Eva Zeisel The Playful Search for Beauty was organized by the Knoxville Museum of Art which subsequently traveled to the Milwaukee Art Museum the High Museum of Art Atlanta and the Hillwood Museum amp Gardens Washington D C From 2005 to 2007 the Erie Art Museum Erie PA mounted the long term exhibition Eva Zeisel The Shape of Life On December 10 2006 The Mingei International Museum in Balboa Park San Diego opened a major centenary retrospective exhibit Eva Zeisel Extraordinary Designer at 100 showing her designs from Schramberg 1928 through more recent designs for Nambe Chantal Eva Zeisel Originals The Orange Chicken and others 2006 The show ran through August 12 2007 In the same year the Pratt Institute Gallery also organized an Exhibition celebrating her centenary Awards EditIn 2005 Zeisel won the Lifetime Achievement award from the Cooper Hewett National Design Museum 21 She received the two highest civilian awards from the Hungarian government as well as the Pratt Legends award and awards from the Industrial Designers Society of America and Alfred University She was an honorary member of the Royal Society of Industrial Designers and received honorary degrees from Parsons New School Rhode Island School of Design the Royal College of Art and the Hungarian University of the Arts Publications EditEva Zeisel The Shape of Life Erie Art Museum 2009 essay by Lance Esplund Eva Zeisel on Design by Eva Zeisel Overlook Press 2004 Eva Zeisel The Playful Search for Beauty by Lucie Young Chronicle Books 2003 Eva Zeisel Designer for Industry 1984 Out of print Available through Eva Zeisel Forum Eva Zeisel Throwing Curves 2002 documentary film Canobie Films Director Jyll Johnstone Regular Bulletins from Eva Zeisel Forum Richards Jean ed 2012 2019 Eva Zeisel A Soviet Prison Memoir 2n edition iBook version contains photos original NKVD documents audio and video clips Kindle version and Kindle paperback text only Pat Kirkham Pat Moore and Pirco Wolfframm 2013 Eva Zeisel Life Design and Beauty San Francisco Chronicle Books Complete works Zelinsky Volker 2019 Eva Zeisel in Hamburg Her Work For Hansa Kunst Keramik 1927 28 Edition Kakenhan Hamburg 49pp 40 illus References Edit Hamilton William L 31 December 2011 Eva Zeisel Ceramic Artist and Designer Dies at 105 The New York Times Re Road Warrior The New Yorker January 18 2010 p 5 Eva Zeisel Royal Stafford Archived from the original on 2012 01 02 Retrieved 2011 12 31 a b c Thurman Judith December 18 2006 Prolific The New Yorker a b c d e f g h Eva S Zeisel Collections Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum Retrieved 30 September 2012 Eva Zeisel obituary Archived from the original on 2014 11 29 Retrieved 2012 11 27 The Eva Zeisel Forum www evazeisel org Butler Cornelia Modern Women Women Artists at the Museum of Modern Art New York Museum of Modern Art Young Lucie c 2003 Eva Zeisel San Francisco Chronicle Books p 11 ISBN 0811834336 Young Lucie c 2003 Eva Zeisel San Francisco Chronicle Books p 14 ISBN 0811834336 Kirkham Moore and Wolffram Pat Pat and Pirco 2013 Eva Zeisel Life Design and Beauty San Francisco CA Chronicle Books pp 66 73 76 222 ISBN 9781452108520 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Brooklyn Museum www brooklynmuseum org Retrieved 2017 04 04 Brooklyn Museum www brooklynmuseum org Retrieved 2017 04 04 a b Moore Pat Wolfframm Pirco 15 October 2013 Eva Zeisel Life Design and Beauty San Francisco CA p 68 ISBN 9781452108520 Traubman Eleanor Meeting Eva Zeisel January 13 2007 McGee Celia March 2007 Eva s Ardor Departures Magazine Herrup Katharine A Potter a Pioneer A Candlestick Maker The New York Sun At Home Section March 3 2007 Wroten Timothy Remembering New York Designer Eva Zeisel Behind the Scenes Blog The New York Historical Society Retrieved 6 January 2012 Throwing Curves Eva Zeisel www canobiefilms org Archived from the original on 2009 08 31 Retrieved 2009 09 03 Designing Modern Women 1890 1990 MoMA The Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2022 12 11 Lifetime Achievement Award Winner Eva Zeisel Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum Archived from the original on 2010 09 26 Retrieved 2010 08 22 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eva Zeisel New York Times Obituary Eva Zeisel Forum Eva Zeisel Originals Throwing Curves Eva Zeisel Documentary New York State College of Ceramics Eva Zeisel at TED Eva Zeisel Tile Design Session on YouTube Eva Zeisel holdings in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art MoMA New York Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eva Zeisel amp oldid 1152584508, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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