Lalique Vases: The New Zealand Collection of Dr Jack C. Richards
By (Author) Damian Skinner
Photographs by Haru Samashima
David Bateman Ltd
David Bateman Ltd
20th October 2011
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
History of art
Exhibition catalogues and specific collections
748.294
Hardback
176
Width 220mm, Height 270mm
Acquiring his first Lalique vase in the 1970s, expatriate New Zealander Dr Jack C. Richards has amassed a collection of over 130 vases by the French designer Rene Lalique. Dating from 1913 to 1938, these vases reveal the sophistication of Lalique's work as a designer, his delight in the design possibilities of the natural world, and his graceful transition from Art Nouveau to Art Deco. While Richards acquired his collection overseas, it now resides in Gisborne, New Zealand. In this book, edited by Damian Skinner and with contributions by Carolyn Hatch and Jan and Simon Afford, Richards' Lalique collection becomes the spur to explore an untold story about domestic taste and international decorative arts in New Zealand, as well as covering the story of Rene Lalique's career as a designer, and the network of collectors who cherish Lalique's glass as a major contribution to modern design.
Damian Skinner is an independent art historian and curator. His recent books include the co-authored Cone Ten Down: Studio Pottery in New Zealand, 1945-1980 (Bateman, 2009), which was a finalist in the New Zealand Post Book Awards in 2010, and The Passing World, The Passage of Life: John Hovell and the Art of Kowhaiwhai (Rim Books, 2010). He has written widely on aspects of New Zealand art history, including modernism, Maori art, and craft.