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1512142

Berndt Friberg

(Sweden, 1899-1981)
Estimate
6 000 - 8 000 SEK
530 - 707 EUR
546 - 729 USD
Hammer price
14 000 SEK
Covered by droit de suite

By law, the buyer will pay an artist fee for this work of art. This fee is 5% of the hammer price, or less. For more information about this law:

Sweden: BUS
Finland: Kuvasto

Purchasing info
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For condition report contact specialist
Eva Seeman
Stockholm
Eva Seeman
Chief Specialist Modern and Contemporary Decorative art and design
+46 (0)708 92 19 69
Berndt Friberg
(Sweden, 1899-1981)

a rabbit's fur stoneware vase, Gustavsberg Studio 1973.

Glazed i yellow hues, signed Friberg, the studio marks a the year letter o. Height 18 cm diameter ca 18.5 cm.

A few broken glaze bubbles.

Designer

Berndt Friberg was a Swedish ceramicist and master potter. He began working with ceramics at a very young age. Eventually, he trained in Denmark before returning to Sweden and Raus Stenkärlsfabrik. After a time at Svedala Slipvarufabrik in the 1920s, Berndt Friberg was employed at Gustavsberg porcelain factory in 1934. He was primarily hired to threw the objects designed by the artistic director Wilhelm Kåge. From 1937, Friberg also worked with Stig Lindberg. Friberg made his debut as an independent ceramicist in 1941 when he exhibited at the Gustavsberg shop on Birger Jarlsgatan in Stockholm alongside Calle Blomqvist and Stig Lindberg.

Many more exhibitions followed over the years. His first solo exhibition was presented at Nordiska Kompaniet in Stockholm in 1954 and it became a public success. Friberg's talent lay in both designing objects and then being able to throw and glaze them. The result was pieces in various sizes, from small miniatures, with the smallest no taller than a couple of centimetres, to large floor vases. The forms were classical, inspired by Chinese stoneware from the Song dynasty (960-1279). He constantly refined the forms and became a master of glazes. The early glazes were matte, known as hare's fur glazes, and later, towards the 1960s, came the glossy glazes such as "oxblood" and "aniara."

During 1957-58, Friberg began working with various patterns in the glaze. The most sought-after pieces by Friberg are large vases in attractive shapes with the matte hare's fur glazes.

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