Annemarie Davidson Jewel Plate

Annemarie Davidson Purple Plate
Annemarie Davidson Jewel Plate
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Annemarie Davidson Purple Plate
Annemarie Davidson Jewel Plate
il_1140xN.2753215034_9gdo.jpeg
il_1140xN.2753215038_ngjn.jpeg

Annemarie Davidson Jewel Plate

$325.00

Designer: Annemarie Davidson (1920 – 2012)

Item: Enamel Jewel Plate

Manufactured by: Annemarie Davidson

Country of origin: United States

Year made: Circa early 1960s

Materials: Copper, enamel and glass

Dimensions:: 8 ½” in diameter

Condition: Excellent.

References: Nelson, Harold; Jazzar, Bernard, Painting with Fire: Masters of Enameling in America, 1930-1980. Long Beach Museum of Art, California (2006); Rosenberg, Alan, Alluring Enamel. Modernism Magazine: (Spring 2003) pages 68–72; Jazzar, Bernard N and Nelson, Harold B. The Enamels of Annemarie Davidson, Glass on Metal, The Enamellist’s Magazine, Volume 27 Number 5 December 2008, pages 98-100; periodical California Design: 6 in 1960.

Description: Here is an unusual color combination Jewels plate by Davidson. We have handled many of Davidson’s enamel plates and have only seen a few using this deep purple as the ground color combined with the use of these pink, yellow and green jewels. This work also has a subtle use of very fine sgraffito rays that radiate outward to the edge. This plate really pops visually and would make a great accent piece in any modern home.

Davidson had a thriving retail business creating enamel objects with objective imagery that is somewhat kitschy, such as birds, trees, frogs, and other depictions from life, and which can be easily found in thrift shops. However, her abstract work is her most highly regarded and was her “fine art” practice. That work was exhibited at California Design in 1960 and several western museums. She was listed in Craftsmen of the Southwest in 1965, which only listed eight enamelists total including Fred Ball, Margaret Montgomery Barlow, Nik Krevitsky, June Schwarcz, Kay Whitcomb and Elllamarie and Jackson Woolley.

Davidson was born in Berlin in 1920, and came to the US in 1936. She studied economics at New York University and later at Columbia University. She studied enameling with the prominent enamel pioneer Doris Hall in the 1950s. Davidson moved to southern California with her husband in 1946, and lived and worked in the Los Angeles area until her death in 2012.

In her work, Davidson frequently uses pieces of glass of varying sizes to create irregular organic shapes which she called her “jewels.” These raised forms appear to float on the liquid surface of the vessel or plaque.

Her works were exhibited in her lifetime at the Pasadena Art Museum, Long Beach Museum of Art, Mobile Museum of Art and the Cleveland Museum of Art, and are now beginning to be widely collected.

We have a large selection of Davidson’s jewel plates available in varying sizes and color combinations so please let us know if there is something in particular you may be looking for because we may have an example for sale.

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