CODART, Dutch and Flemish art in museums worldwide

Aardewerk in Stijl: de geschiedenis van Potterie Kennemerland (1920-1942)

Earthenware in Stijl: the history of Potterie Kennemerland (1920-1942) Exhibition: 29 November 2008 - 1 March 2009

From the museum website, 11 November 2008

The Gemeentemuseum has a unique collection of Dutch ceramics, including some fine examples of earthenware from Potterie Kennemerland, one of the few manufacturers in the interwar period to focus exclusively on the production of decorative earthenware with the characteristic motifs of the De Stijl movement. The exhibition looks at the period when the factory was located in Velsen (1920-1942), showing both its Modernist earthenware from the 1920s and the ‘crisis earthenware’ of the 1930s.

Potterie Kennemerland was established in Velsen in 1920 by Koen Mertens (1889-1953) and Eelke Snel (1899-1939), who had previously helped found De Vier Paddenstoelen in Utrecht. Over the course of just over 20 years Potterie Kennemerland developed a range of products that influenced the look of Dutch interiors in the period between the wars.

The Velsen earthenware from the first decade of the factory’s existence features a geometric form language and decorative style that was closely related to De Stijl. The business grew rapidly, and from the second half of the 1920s the factory’s innovative designs were produced in series. In 1929 the factory took on designer Karl J. Gellings (1892-1959), who introduced a new plastic form language and Expressionist palette in the style of the Amsterdam School, creating art objects, decorative vases and animal figures. After this interlude, in order to survive the economic crisis the factory produced cheaper, glazed earthenware known as ‘crisis earthenware’ which proved very popular with the public. The unique pieces of Velsen earthenware on display in the exhibition allow visitors to track this development.

Publication

Aardewerk in Stijl: de geschiedenis van Potterie Kennemerland (1920-1942)
Titus M. Eliëns
Published on the occasion of an exhibition held in 2008-09 in The Hague (Gemeentemuseum Den Haag)
96 pp., 100 illustrations in color, hardbound
Zwolle (Waanders) and The Hague (Gemeentemuseum Den Haag) 2008
ISBN-13 978-90-400-9512-3