Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker
Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's by Kay Fisker

Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's 1950 - 1959

Kay Fisker

Silber
25 cm, ø 12 cm
ConditionVery good
€ 6.000

Van Kerkhoff Art

  • Über Kunstwerk
    Kay Fisker - Sterling silver Wine Pitcher (Vinkande) - Anton Michelsen, Denmark 1950's

    This icon of Scandinavian design was drawn in 1927 by Kay Fisker and is his best known silver design among many others. The Wine Pitcher is considered one of the earliest example of Modernist Danish Silver - designed well before Georg Jensen became famous for it - and therefore is a keywork in Danish silver.

    Based on the near perfection of the shape of the pitcher, one would suggest these pitchers were machine made. But they were entirely made by hand using traditional methods certainly an incredible feat!

    This particular Wine Pitcher bears no mark for production year - which is very common for Danish silver - but makes dating it difficult. The letter fond used strongly suggests it can be dated to the 1950’s. A nearly identical piece in the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, bearing identical marks and letter fond. The Philadelphia pieces has a year letter hallmark and was made in 1957, which supports the dating of our piece.

    Kay Fisker Wine Pitchers were made by Anton Michelsen in two sizes: 1,0 liter and 1,5 liter. In this case the smaller size is more desirable as it is the original design, the larger size was later added by A. Michelsen.

    About Kay Fisker
    Kay Fisker (1893 Frederiksburg, Denmark – 1965 Copenhagen, Denmark) was a famous Danish architect, designer and educator. He is mostly known for his many housing projects, mainly in the Copenhagen area. Between 1925 and 1928 Fisker was responsible for the design of several highly influential modernist silver objects for Anton Michelsen.

    The designs had very considerable influence on later silverwork in Denmark. Over the next decades Michelsen continued to employ noted architects (including Denmark's most famous architect: Arne Jacobsen) as designers of silver tablewares, and following Fisker's lead, they were responsible for introducing innovative forms into the company's products.

    It was not until after 1930 that the better-known Danish firm Georg Jensen took the modern approach that Fisker and Michelsen had pioneered.

    Marked
    Sterling (Silver 925/1000) Denmark, A. Michelsen Copenhagen, Designer stamp: Kay Fisker. And “K”, most likely the mark of the individual silversmith that made this pitcher.

    Condition
    Pitcher is in very good condition, some minor scratches and marks consistent with age and use.

    Literature
    Kathryn B. Hiesinger and George H. Marcus, from Guides to European Decorative Arts: Design, 1900-1940 (1987), p. 34.

    Dimensions
    H 25 cm x Dm 12 cm
    Weight 634 grams
  • Über Künstler

    Kay Fisker studierte an der Kunstakademie und machte 1920 seinen Abschluss als Architekt. Er ist bekannt für mehrere Wohnprojekte aus den 1920er bis 1950er Jahren im Raum Kopenhagen. Von 1932 bis 1943 arbeitete er zusammen mit dem Architekten C. F. Moeller an der Gestaltung der Universität Aarhus. Von 1936-1963 war er Professor an der Kunstakademie.

    Fisker war einer der ersten Architekten, der Möbel, Silberwaren, Buchillustrationen und typografische Arbeiten entwarf. Für seine Entwürfe und Bauten wurde er mit mehreren Preisen und Auszeichnungen ausgezeichnet. Im Zusammenhang mit seinem Architekturgeschäft hat er auch mehrere Innendekorationsaufträge ausgeführt.

    Er begann in den 1920er Jahren zunächst im neoklassizistischen Stil Silber für A. Michelsen zu entwerfen, wechselte aber ab 1926 zum sauberen, raffinierten funktionalistischen Stil ohne Dekoration. Sein Stil war sehr zeitlos. Fisker hatte China, Japan und den Fernen Osten besucht und war von deren Formen und Designsprache inspiriert.

Sind Sie daran interessiert, dieses Kunstwerk zu kaufen?