Lucie RIE

The Players, 1919

Pencil and ink wash on paper
25.4 x 20.3 cm

1923, Irrigation, Zionist Development, Palestine, 1923

Oil on board
32 x 40.2 cm
Titled, dated and inscribed ‘authenticated by Lilian Bomberg’ on label verso

Paysage au Puits, c.1925-30

Oil on board
38 x 46 cm
Signed

The Steamer Normand on the Seine, c.1932

Pencil on paper
33 x 45 cm
Signed and dated verso

By a Lighthouse, c.1936

Oil on board
46 x 46 cm (irregular)

Sailing Boat Entering Harbour, c.1937

Oil on thick card
23 x 23 cm (irregular)
Signed

Cornish Lugger in Harbour, c.1938

ALFRED WALLIS

House paint on thick card
17 x 28 cm (irregular)
Signed

Seated Nude, 1939

Sanguine chalk on paper
38 x 25.5 cm / 15 x 10 inches
Signed, dated and inscribed with the opus number lower right; also signed upper right
Opus D.39-8

Seated Nude – Courtyard, Greenleaves, c.1942

Oil on canvas
61 x 54.5 cm
Estate stamp verso

Still Life with Fruit, 1949

Oil on canvas
43 x 51 cm

Figurine

c.1950
Transparent hot modelled Murano glass with bright gold foil internal application
24.5 cm high

for Salviati, Nudo a Masello

1950
Murano glass
19 cm high

In the Night Blue Turns to Red, 1950

Oil on masonite
122 x 122 cm / 48 x 48 inches
Signed, dated and inscribed with the title and opus number verso

Nemi, near Rome, 1950

Oil on board
26 x 36 cm
Signed and dated verso

Porthleven Harbour, 1950

Oil on board
34 x 24 cm
Signed and dated, also signed and inscribed verso

Rabbit's Dream, 1950

Oil on masonite
60 x 70.5 cm
Signed, dated and inscribed with the title verso

November Landscape, 1951

Oil on canvas
152 x 91 cm
Signed and dated

Sculpture Project, 1952

Oil on canvas
81 x 121.5 cm

Seated Figure, 1953

Bronze with a brown patina
Height 24.5 cm / 9 5/8 inches
Conceived in 1953

Early Stranger, 1954

Bronze
Height 29 cm /11 ½ inches
Stamped ‘Morris Singer Founders London’ and edition number ‘3/6’ underneath
Conceived in 1954 and cast in an edition of 6
LC137

Le Jardin, 1954

Oil on canvas
72.5 x 53 cm
Signed and dated; inscribed with the title verso
SPECIAL PRICE £5,500

Paul's Puffer, 1954

Oil on board
101.5 x 122 cm / 40 x 48 inches
Opus O.110

Untitled, 1954

Oil on paper
49 x 38 cm / 19 ¼ x 15 inches

Untitled, 1954

Oil on paper
47.5 x 38 cm / 18 ¾ x 15 inches

Page 1 of 18

LUCIE RIE British, 1902-1995

Lucie Rie was a pioneer of modernism in pottery during the 20th century, often called the ‘Godmother of modern ceramics.’ Read on for more on her life and career!

Dame Lucie Rie is a name that is always at the forefront of a conversation on modern ceramics, but one that is often overlooked when talking about important artists of the C20th. Yet the story of her career is one that deserves to place her as a great 20th-century artist. An Austrian émigré who was forced to flee the horrors of Nazi occupation, she flipped the landscape of British ceramics on its head. Her approach to ceramics turned it from a traditional craft into a high art form that you can often find gracing the floors of prestigious art institutions. 

Lucie Rie was born in Vienna in 1902. Her father, Benjamin Gomperz, was a consultant to Sigmund Freud and he nurtured Rie’s artistic upbringing in the culturally exciting city that Vienna was at the turn of the century. She learned to throw at the Vienna Kunstgewerbeschule, where she enrolled in 1922, where she was guided by the artist and sculptor Michael Powolny

Rie was quick to gain notoriety in her native country and across mainland Europe, opening her first studio in Vienna in 1925. She won a gold medal at the Brussels International Exhibition in 1935 and soon garnered increased respect as an exciting new ceramicist. With her pots inspired by Viennese Modernism and continental design, she was able to exhibit her works at the prestigious Paris International Exhibition in 1937, winning a silver medal. However, as her career in Europe was about to take off, she was forced to leave Austria in 1938 after the Nazi invasion. She chose to emigrate to the UK, settling in London.

When Rie came over to Britain as an exciting young potter she entered into a ceramic landscape that was dominated by one name, Bernard Leach. Leach and his pupils promoted the idea of ceramics as a craft. Looking back to an English past of handmade functional pots created for personal use, they aimed to move away from the mass-produced wares that were coming out of the Staffordshire potteries. 

Leach also had a particular interest in the traditions of Japanese pottery, taking many of the forms and subtle decorations and translating them into his own work and teachings. This culminated in him forming the Leach Pottery along with his friend and associate the Japanese potter Shoji Hamada. Once established, the Leach Pottery was the prevailing influence on British modern ceramics during the first half of the 20th century. Yet for Rie, this was an approach that seemed far removed from her own pottery. With her work being heavily influenced by contemporary European design, it was clear that she was going to have to forge her own path if she was going to make an impact.

The Britain that Rie arrived at was also one ravaged by war, meaning that work and money was hard to come by. Luckily for Rie, a fellow Austrian who had also fled to the UK, Fritz Lampl, was able to offer her a role at his newly formed Orplid glass studio. There she was tasked with making glass buttons and this experience turned out to be vital to her development in her new home. Using the knowledge she gained at Orplid she decided to set up her own ceramic button workshop, based out of her flat in London. The button workshop soon became a lucrative venture for Rie, with her having to employ a number of assistants to keep up with demand. And although these buttons were primarily a way to make money, it did not stop Rie from experimenting with form and glazes. 

Often quite large, the buttons provided a perfect base on which to showcase the different colors and effects she was able to achieve through her glazes. She developed a few designs that were able to be produced quickly through the use of press molds. With names such as Rose, Stars and Lettuce, her buttons provided stylish additions to the high fashion of the day. Rie’s first foray into ceramic work in her adopted home was certainly a success and demonstrated how she did not seek to conform to the Leach ideal. She was not looking back to the historic craft and aesthetic to influence her modern ceramics, instead using her training and experience to create accessories that complemented the modern couture market.

However, even though her button business was proving successful, her true passion still lay in pots. The first pots that Rie created in Britain received a lukewarm reception. Her fellow British potters saw her delicate and intricately crafted vessels to be at odds with the more solid and wholly functional wares that the Leach Pottery had influenced. Nonetheless, despite this early criticism, Rie stuck with her vision and continued to create works that displayed her artistic background in Europe. 

As she began to become more prolific after the end of the Second World War she also began an important relationship with a fellow Austrian émigré, Hans Coper. Coper, who like Rie had fled Austria during the Nazi occupation and come to live in London, arrived at Rie’s button workshop penniless and desperate for work. Rie obliged and gave Coper a job as one of her assistants pressing buttons in her workshop. Despite Coper never having handled clay before working for Rie, his talent was swiftly noticed and it wasn’t long before Rie made him her associate. 

During their partnership, they were producing mostly domestic tableware such as their tea and coffee sets. These were sold at upmarket department stores such as Liberty’s and the chocolate retailer Bendicks in London. The wares were characteristically modern in their design with Rie implementing sgraffito decoration- thin lines scratched across the outside of the pieces. These wares were the beginning of what would become Rie’s trademark approach to modern ceramics throughout the rest of her career. 

The delicacy of her forms was emphasized by the use of the sgraffito decoration, in the same way, that a column’s fluting draws the eye upwards. This imbues Rie’s pieces with a lightness that is rarely seen in ceramics. Over the next ten years, the pottery was regularly in business and the works were retailed at upmarket establishments in London and cities across the globe. Following this success, Hans Coper decided to go his own and would quickly make his name as a leading modern ceramicist. But as Coper went on to focus on producing single pieces that prioritized sculptural form over functional use, Rie still desired to find that perfect balance between function and beauty in her work.

Rie’s fascination with glazes did not let up as she entered into the 1970s. Through adding different colorants and minerals she was able to achieve different effects with her glazes. Her later career is one marked by vibrant color, utilizing pinks, reds, blues, and yellows in a manner that pushed what a pot was expected to be. By this point in her career and through into the 1980s, Rie focused on making one-off pots yet producing them in large quantities. 

Although many decried this approach as being one that lacked true artistic vision through its repetitive nature, Rie did not see it that way. As Rie said herself “There seems to the casual onlooker little variety in ceramic shapes and designs. But to the lover of pottery, there is an endless variety.” And with the wide variety of glazes that she employed, it was certainly the case that her pots lacked any sense of repetition. Choosing to paint her glaze onto the unfired pot instead of dipping it into the glaze, her pots are characterized as being light and painterly in their finish. Whereas dipping provides a smooth finish across the glaze, applying it using a brush leaves minute differences in texture and thickness that act differently under changing light, as well as making the colors more vivid.

Rie retired from work in the 1990s and received a damehood in 1991 for her contribution to art and culture in Britain. She died in 1995 and left behind a career that was unrivaled in the world of ceramic art. Working in what was at the time a male-dominated medium, she was able to overcome prejudices and create a whole new approach to ceramic art. Many ceramicists since cite her as a major influence and her legacy can be seen in the works of Emmanuel CooperJohn Ward, and Sara Flynn. With her works spread across the world, she is truly a global artist and it is only right that she is now regarded as not only a great ceramicist but one of the most important artists of the 20th century.     

Lucie RIE

Untitled, 1954

Oil on wooden panel
27 x 73 cm

Seated Woman with Square Head (version B), 1955

Bronze
Height 59 cm / 23 ¼ inches; Width 30 cm / 11 ¾ inches
Stamped with Susse Fondeur Paris foundry stamp (on the reverse of the base)
Conceived in 1955 and cast in an edition of 6 by Susse Fondeur Paris in 1957

The Hiding Place of Dragon, 1955

Oil on masonite
160 x 193 cm

Untitled, 1955

Oil on canvas
91.4 x 76 cm 
Signed and dated

Watergarden Dream, 1955

Oil on masonite
152.5 x 244 cm
Signed, dated and inscribed with title and opus number O.131 verso

Altar of the Snakes, 1956

Oil on board
152.5 x 122 cm
Signed, dated and inscribed with the title verso

Bird Cage No.1, 1956

Oil on board
122 x 152.5 cm
Opus O.165

Newlyn Grey, 1956

Oil on board
24 x 33 cm / 9 ½ x 13 inches

Priest of the Red Temple, 1956

Oil on canvas
183 x 244 cm / 72 x 96 inches
Signed, dated and inscribed with the title verso

Woman Bewitched by the Moon, No.1, 1956

Oil on board
200.5 x 152.5 cm
Signed, dated and inscribed with the title verso
Opus O.174

Crab Creation, 1957/58

Oil on board
122 x 183 cm
Opus O.238

Initiation of the Bride, 1957-58

Oil on board
152.5 x 198 cm / 60 x 78 inches     
Opus O.236       

Londonderry, 1957

Painted plaster
97 x 97 cm
Signed, titled and dated verso

Philosopher's Stone, 1957

Oil on board
152.5 x 198 cm
Signed, dated and inscribed with the title verso
Opus O.235

Snake's Objectives, 1957

Oil on masonite
122 x 101.5 cm / 48 x 40 inches
Signed, dated and inscribed with the title verso

Ascent of the Black Mountain, 1958

Oil on paper
42 x 53 cm
Signed, inscribed and dated
Opus OG.26A

Harbour Sunrise, 1958

ALAN DAVIE

Oil on paper
26.5 x 42 cm
Signed, inscribed and dated upper left 
(ADE – 0020)

Pandora, 1958-1962

Bronze, ebony and limestone
156.2 x 120.6 x 22.9 cm
Conceived in 1958-1962 this is a unique piece

Untitled No.17, 1958

Oil on paper laid on board
26.6 x 42 cm

Untitled, 1958

Collage
120 x 80 cm

Untitled,1958

Gouache and collage on paper
36 x 42 cm
Initialled and dated ‘58’

Nude Study, 1959

Charcoal drawing
66 x 58 cm
Signed and dated

A Night with the Smiling Arab, 1960

Oil on masonite
122 x 152.5 cm / 48 x 60 inches
Signed, dated and inscribed with the title verso
Opus O.277

Page 1 of 17

LUCIE RIE British, 1902-1995

Lucie Rie was a pioneer of modernism in pottery during the 20th century, often called the ‘Godmother of modern ceramics.’ Read on for more on her life and career!

Dame Lucie Rie is a name that is always at the forefront of a conversation on modern ceramics, but one that is often overlooked when talking about important artists of the C20th. Yet the story of her career is one that deserves to place her as a great 20th-century artist. An Austrian émigré who was forced to flee the horrors of Nazi occupation, she flipped the landscape of British ceramics on its head. Her approach to ceramics turned it from a traditional craft into a high art form that you can often find gracing the floors of prestigious art institutions. 

Lucie Rie was born in Vienna in 1902. Her father, Benjamin Gomperz, was a consultant to Sigmund Freud and he nurtured Rie’s artistic upbringing in the culturally exciting city that Vienna was at the turn of the century. She learned to throw at the Vienna Kunstgewerbeschule, where she enrolled in 1922, where she was guided by the artist and sculptor Michael Powolny

Rie was quick to gain notoriety in her native country and across mainland Europe, opening her first studio in Vienna in 1925. She won a gold medal at the Brussels International Exhibition in 1935 and soon garnered increased respect as an exciting new ceramicist. With her pots inspired by Viennese Modernism and continental design, she was able to exhibit her works at the prestigious Paris International Exhibition in 1937, winning a silver medal. However, as her career in Europe was about to take off, she was forced to leave Austria in 1938 after the Nazi invasion. She chose to emigrate to the UK, settling in London.

When Rie came over to Britain as an exciting young potter she entered into a ceramic landscape that was dominated by one name, Bernard Leach. Leach and his pupils promoted the idea of ceramics as a craft. Looking back to an English past of handmade functional pots created for personal use, they aimed to move away from the mass-produced wares that were coming out of the Staffordshire potteries. 

Leach also had a particular interest in the traditions of Japanese pottery, taking many of the forms and subtle decorations and translating them into his own work and teachings. This culminated in him forming the Leach Pottery along with his friend and associate the Japanese potter Shoji Hamada. Once established, the Leach Pottery was the prevailing influence on British modern ceramics during the first half of the 20th century. Yet for Rie, this was an approach that seemed far removed from her own pottery. With her work being heavily influenced by contemporary European design, it was clear that she was going to have to forge her own path if she was going to make an impact.

The Britain that Rie arrived at was also one ravaged by war, meaning that work and money was hard to come by. Luckily for Rie, a fellow Austrian who had also fled to the UK, Fritz Lampl, was able to offer her a role at his newly formed Orplid glass studio. There she was tasked with making glass buttons and this experience turned out to be vital to her development in her new home. Using the knowledge she gained at Orplid she decided to set up her own ceramic button workshop, based out of her flat in London. The button workshop soon became a lucrative venture for Rie, with her having to employ a number of assistants to keep up with demand. And although these buttons were primarily a way to make money, it did not stop Rie from experimenting with form and glazes. 

Often quite large, the buttons provided a perfect base on which to showcase the different colors and effects she was able to achieve through her glazes. She developed a few designs that were able to be produced quickly through the use of press molds. With names such as Rose, Stars and Lettuce, her buttons provided stylish additions to the high fashion of the day. Rie’s first foray into ceramic work in her adopted home was certainly a success and demonstrated how she did not seek to conform to the Leach ideal. She was not looking back to the historic craft and aesthetic to influence her modern ceramics, instead using her training and experience to create accessories that complemented the modern couture market.

However, even though her button business was proving successful, her true passion still lay in pots. The first pots that Rie created in Britain received a lukewarm reception. Her fellow British potters saw her delicate and intricately crafted vessels to be at odds with the more solid and wholly functional wares that the Leach Pottery had influenced. Nonetheless, despite this early criticism, Rie stuck with her vision and continued to create works that displayed her artistic background in Europe. 

As she began to become more prolific after the end of the Second World War she also began an important relationship with a fellow Austrian émigré, Hans Coper. Coper, who like Rie had fled Austria during the Nazi occupation and come to live in London, arrived at Rie’s button workshop penniless and desperate for work. Rie obliged and gave Coper a job as one of her assistants pressing buttons in her workshop. Despite Coper never having handled clay before working for Rie, his talent was swiftly noticed and it wasn’t long before Rie made him her associate. 

During their partnership, they were producing mostly domestic tableware such as their tea and coffee sets. These were sold at upmarket department stores such as Liberty’s and the chocolate retailer Bendicks in London. The wares were characteristically modern in their design with Rie implementing sgraffito decoration- thin lines scratched across the outside of the pieces. These wares were the beginning of what would become Rie’s trademark approach to modern ceramics throughout the rest of her career. 

The delicacy of her forms was emphasized by the use of the sgraffito decoration, in the same way, that a column’s fluting draws the eye upwards. This imbues Rie’s pieces with a lightness that is rarely seen in ceramics. Over the next ten years, the pottery was regularly in business and the works were retailed at upmarket establishments in London and cities across the globe. Following this success, Hans Coper decided to go his own and would quickly make his name as a leading modern ceramicist. But as Coper went on to focus on producing single pieces that prioritized sculptural form over functional use, Rie still desired to find that perfect balance between function and beauty in her work.

Rie’s fascination with glazes did not let up as she entered into the 1970s. Through adding different colorants and minerals she was able to achieve different effects with her glazes. Her later career is one marked by vibrant color, utilizing pinks, reds, blues, and yellows in a manner that pushed what a pot was expected to be. By this point in her career and through into the 1980s, Rie focused on making one-off pots yet producing them in large quantities. 

Although many decried this approach as being one that lacked true artistic vision through its repetitive nature, Rie did not see it that way. As Rie said herself “There seems to the casual onlooker little variety in ceramic shapes and designs. But to the lover of pottery, there is an endless variety.” And with the wide variety of glazes that she employed, it was certainly the case that her pots lacked any sense of repetition. Choosing to paint her glaze onto the unfired pot instead of dipping it into the glaze, her pots are characterized as being light and painterly in their finish. Whereas dipping provides a smooth finish across the glaze, applying it using a brush leaves minute differences in texture and thickness that act differently under changing light, as well as making the colors more vivid.

Rie retired from work in the 1990s and received a damehood in 1991 for her contribution to art and culture in Britain. She died in 1995 and left behind a career that was unrivaled in the world of ceramic art. Working in what was at the time a male-dominated medium, she was able to overcome prejudices and create a whole new approach to ceramic art. Many ceramicists since cite her as a major influence and her legacy can be seen in the works of Emmanuel CooperJohn Ward, and Sara Flynn. With her works spread across the world, she is truly a global artist and it is only right that she is now regarded as not only a great ceramicist but one of the most important artists of the 20th century.