A 59 pieces Wilhelm Kåge service, porcelain, Guldstjärna, Gustavsberg, Sweden.
Dekor i blått och med förgylld dekor. Märkta Gustavsberg Guldstjärna Kåge.
11 kaffekoppar med fat, höjd 6,5 och diameter 13,5 cm.
13 assietter, diameter 17,5 cm.
12 förrättstallrikar, diameter 21 cm.
Karaff, höjd 17,5 cm.
Kaffekanna, höjd 19 cm.
Såsbåt, längd 20 cm.
Gräddkanna, höjd 7,5 cm.
Sockerskål, höjd 10 cm.
Liten serveringsskål med hänklar, längd 19,5 cm.
12 mattallrikar, diameter 24 cm.
Uppläggningsfat, diameter 29,5 cm.
Uppläggningsfat, diameter 28,5 cm.
Uppläggningsfat, diameter 24,5 cm.
Serveringsskål, längd, 24 cm.
Serveringsskål, längd, 19 cm.
Stains. Wear and tear. Glaze flaws.
one side plate with a crack running through the rim.
One appetizer plate with a scratch and color loss on the border.
Minor chips on the underside of the coffee pot lid.
Minor chip on the underside of the sugar bowl lid.
Wilhelm Kåge was a Swedish artist and ceramicist. Kåge is known for his ceramics for the Gustavsberg porcelain factory, where he was the artistic director from 1917 to 1949. Kåge studied from 1910 under Carl Wilhelmson at the Valand Academy of Art in Gothenburg and later under Johan Rohde in Copenhagen, where he became acquainted with Gösta Adrian-Nilsson (GAN) and grew closer to modern art. He studied graphic art in Munich and began his artistic career by designing posters for theatres and exhibitions, among other things. His connection with Gustavsberg was facilitated through the Swedish Society of Crafts and Design, as Gustavsberg needed new products for the Home Exhibition at Liljevalchs in 1917. He went on to design around thirty different dinnerware sets, as well as art pottery, colourful faience, stoneware, and various series of art pottery such as Carrara, Surrea, and Våga. In 1942, Kåge, together with Stig Lindberg, established the Gustavsberg Studio, which became a kind of aesthetic laboratory for art pottery.
At the Stockholm Exhibition in 1930, Kåge presented Gustavsberg's future sales success "Argenta," a series of art pottery primarily glazed in green but also in red, blue, brown, and celadon green, and decorated with various silver designs based on Kåge's sketches. Argenta became very popular and was produced well into the 1970s. The powerful stonewares "Farsta" were also presented at the Stockholm Exhibition and they became the ones closest to Kåge's heart and with which he continued to experiment throughout his life. The pieces improved over the years, and the most impressive and many of the most sought-after items were created by Kåge during the 1950s.