Certain ceramics are so distinctive that they come to represent entire design movements.
The Art Deco period introduced a new visual language into domestic design. Bold colours, stylised landscapes and geometric forms replaced the delicate ornament of earlier eras, and few designers captured this spirit more vividly than Clarice Cliff. Her vibrant patterns transformed everyday pottery into something playful and expressive. A Fantasque Bizarre bowl in the Summerhouse pattern, decorated with stylised trees and bold geometric borders, recently achieved £110, reflecting the designer’s continued popularity with collectors.
Art Deco figurative ceramics also continue to perform well at auction. A Royal Dux porcelain figure of a dancer by Elly Strobach König, dating to around 1925, realised £180, capturing the elegance and movement that defined the era.
Equally evocative of twentieth-century design is the surreal imagination of Piero Fornasetti. A set of three Tema e Variazioni plates – part of his celebrated series exploring variations of a mysterious female face – sold for £160, illustrating the crossover appeal between decorative art and contemporary interior styling.