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Pippin Drysdale

(Australian, b. 1943)

Pippin Drysdale
(Australian, b. 1943)

"Splendour at Black Rock I", 2018/19

group of five painted porcelain vessels and sculptures
all with artist stamp at bottom, including two open-topped vessels, h. 6-1/4", dia. 5-1/2" and h. 10-3/8", dia. 6-7/8", and three sculptures, h. 3-1/2", dia. 3-3/4", h. 7-1/2", dia. 7" and h. 8", dia. 6-1/2".


Provenance: Adrian Sassoon, London, England; Estate of Thomas B. Lemann, New Orleans, Louisiana.

Notes: One could call Pippin Drysdale a landscape artist utilizing ceramics as a medium. Her works pulsate with intense colors, as rich and varied as the artist's native Australian landscape and the forms are an assemblage of asymmetrical elements, echoing the geological features of Australia; her signature incisions mirror the linear patterns of the land and exposed rock strata.

"Splendor at Black Rock I" is a compilation of asymmetrical sculptures as well as vessels and serves as an interesting meditation on differences between ceramics as utilitarian objects versus purely sculptural. The vessels are colored in the lavish hues of the land on the exterior and glowing dome of the vast Australian skies in the interior.

"So much of my journey has all developed into a thematic of traces, traces of time, linear lines, shadows, color and big crops," Pippin explained in an interview for Design Files, an Australian online design website. Glazes are applied in layers and once dried, Drysdale makes her careful, precise incisions. Later, they are filled with new color, carefully working one section at a time. "The lines take on their own journey," she says, explaining the intricate network of rivulets for a single vessel surface can consume up to eight hours to complete (Design Files, 2021). After each color is applied, the body is wiped off and color re-applied again, giving each piece subtle shading, marking each work as unique. The whole process can take several days to complete.

Pippin Drysdale's work has been widely exhibited internationally, and was included in the 2017 Sotheby's traveling exhibit "Treasures from Chatsworth". The Duke and Duchess of Devonshire acquired three major installations for the "Chatsworth Collection".

group of five painted porcelain vessels and sculptures
all with artist stamp at bottom, including two open-topped vessels, h. 6-1/4", dia. 5-1/2" and h. 10-3/8", dia. 6-7/8", and three sculptures, h. 3-1/2", dia. 3-3/4", h. 7-1/2", dia. 7" and h. 8", dia. 6-1/2".

  • Provenance: Adrian Sassoon, London, England; Estate of Thomas B. Lemann, New Orleans, Louisiana.
  • Notes: One could call Pippin Drysdale a landscape artist utilizing ceramics as a medium. Her works pulsate with intense colors, as rich and varied as the artist's native Australian landscape and the forms are an assemblage of asymmetrical elements, echoing the geological features of Australia; her signature incisions mirror the linear patterns of the land and exposed rock strata.

    "Splendor at Black Rock I" is a compilation of asymmetrical sculptures as well as vessels and serves as an interesting meditation on differences between ceramics as utilitarian objects versus purely sculptural. The vessels are colored in the lavish hues of the land on the exterior and glowing dome of the vast Australian skies in the interior.

    "So much of my journey has all developed into a thematic of traces, traces of time, linear lines, shadows, color and big crops," Pippin explained in an interview for Design Files, an Australian online design website. Glazes are applied in layers and once dried, Drysdale makes her careful, precise incisions. Later, they are filled with new color, carefully working one section at a time. "The lines take on their own journey," she says, explaining the intricate network of rivulets for a single vessel surface can consume up to eight hours to complete (Design Files, 2021). After each color is applied, the body is wiped off and color re-applied again, giving each piece subtle shading, marking each work as unique. The whole process can take several days to complete.

    Pippin Drysdale's work has been widely exhibited internationally, and was included in the 2017 Sotheby's traveling exhibit "Treasures from Chatsworth". The Duke and Duchess of Devonshire acquired three major installations for the "Chatsworth Collection".
  • Condition: **In overall very good condition.

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