Joseph-Théodore Deck - Gallic Rooster - Walters 482537

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Joseph-Théodore Deck - Gallic Rooster - Walters 482537

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Summary

Deck began his career as a stove-maker, working first in Vienna, where he produced stoves for Schönbrunn Palace, and, after 1847, in Paris. At the Exposition Universelle held in Paris in 1855, he was so impressed by the Minton factory's brightly colored majolica wares that he decided to produce his own. The following year, he opened a factory for "artistic faience." Inspired by the designs and colors of Turkish Iznik wares, he developed his own range of colors, including a distinctive turquoise known as "bleu Deck." Deck employed a number of noted artists to work for him and continued to exhibit in the various international exhibitions, winning a wide following both in England and America as well as in France.
Deck's extraordinary range of glaze colors is displayed in this rooster, a national emblem of France.

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Date

1880
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Source

Walters Art Museum
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http://purl.org/thewalters/rights/standard

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