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Jean Cocteau Terracotta Pottery Dish, 
Faune Musicien (Face),
Signed & Dated By Jean Cocteau 1958
Number Twenty Seven of an Edition of Fifty.

Jean Cocteau ceramic dish with grey engobe, oxide crayon and coloured glaze and painted with a naked faun sitting on a tree stump playing a pipe.

Diameter: 12 inches ( 31.6cm)

With original Certificat D'Origine.

Marks: Signed and dated on front; 
On reverse inscribed Edition Originale de Jean Cocteau, Atelier Madeline-Jolly and numbered 27/50 on the reverse.

Jean Cocteau came to the world of pottery rather late in life, he was 68 years old when he began to explore the field of ceramics after meeting Marie Madeleine Jolly and Philippe Madeline, with whom he worked in close collaboration to create his series of pottery from 1958 until the year of his death in 1963. During the years at the “Madeleine-Jolly” workshop, he created more than 300 pieces of ceramic and jewelry, which he referred to as “graphic poetry”. Jean Cocteau was not content to work with the ceramic techniques and within the style of decorations that were used; he had a vision in mind, to leave as much of the clay bare and to embellish it as one would apply tattoos to the skin. 

He adopted three techniques for decorating ceramic. He used enamels on the clay, typically to outline forms, the profile of a subject, for example. He also used small red enamel dots as embellishment, and well as coloring the eyes and sometimes to highlight facial features such as the nostril or the tongue. He very rarely used enamel to cover the background of a dish entirely. 

A new technique was a “pencil” of sorts – a combination of clay and oxides that were rolled into cylinders and used to draw onto the surface of the clay, rendering the effect of a pastel on paper.

Finally, he also used slip to cover the background of some of his pieces, occasionally employing the sgraffito technique where the slip is carved through to reveal the clay beneath. Occasionally he also carved the surface of the clay to render dimensional and textural appeal to the work.

Jean Cocteau found the inspiration for his work in many muses from classical mythology, as we find in many of his ceramics, and from his contemporaries. One can clearly see the influence of his close friend Pablo Picasso’s famous line drawing technique in Cocteau’s own work. Interestingly, Cocteau is quoted as having said; “Picasso told me that if I put a ceramic in the kiln, I would be lost. But I have always taken great pleasure in being lost.”

“…Pottery has saved my life! It stops me from using ink, which has become too dangerous since everything we write is systematically deformed by our readers.” Jean Cocteau

Dimensions

25.4cm ddiameter




Condition report

Excellent

Stock number

vm98283

The BADA Standard

  • Since 1918, BADA has been the leading association for the antiques and fine art trade
  • Members are elected for their knowledge, integrity and quality of stock
  • Our clients are protected by BADA’s code of conduct
  • Our dealers’ membership is reviewed and renewed annually
  • Bada.org is a non-profit site: clients deal directly with members and they pay no hidden fees
Click here for more information on the BADA Standard