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Sven Wejsfelt

(Sweden, 1930-2009)
Estimate
20 000 - 25 000 SEK
1 850 - 2 320 EUR
2 080 - 2 600 USD
Hammer price
17 000 SEK
Covered by droit de suite

By law, the buyer will pay an artist fee for this work of art. This fee is 5% of the hammer price, or less. For more information about this law:

Sweden: BUS
Finland: Kuvasto

Purchasing info
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For condition report contact specialist
Camilla Behrer
Stockholm
Camilla Behrer
Head of Design/ Specialist Modern & Contemporary Decorative Art & Design
+46 (0)708 92 19 77
Sven Wejsfelt
(Sweden, 1930-2009)

a stoneware floor vase, Gustavsberg Studio, Sweden 1987.

Speckled glaze in beige and brown, signed SWen with the studio mark -87. Height 72 cm.

Designer

Sven Wejsfelt (originally Johansson, 1930-2009) was a Swedish ceramist, freehand potter, and sculptor, active at Rörstrand Porcelain Factory (1946-53) and Gustavsberg Porcelain Factory (1953-2008).

Wejsfelt worked in a classic stoneware tradition with thin thrown shapes and was a master of glazes. He served as a potter for, among others, Gunnar Nylund and Stig Lindberg, but also many other artists such as Hertha Bengtson, Marianne Westman, Sylvia Leuchovius, and Carl-Harry Stålhane. Wejsfelt's first own items were made as private tests during breaks in his work.
His collaboration with Stig Lindberg at Gustavsberg lasted 17 years, until 1970. It was not until 1977 that he became a ceramist under his own name with collections of thrown stoneware and cast fish and animal figures. In 1987, he exhibited with the other Gustavsberg artists in the exhibition Studio Gustavsberg. Wejsfelt often worked in cornflower blue, as well as with rabbit's fur glazes in various colours, magnificent 'sang de boeuf', and delicate blue and pale yellow glazes. Miniatures were his specialty.

Today, Sven Wejsfelt is considered one of the last Swedish ceramists who developed and carried forward the Chinese-founded stoneware tradition that flourished most in Sweden during the 1930s to 1960s. His stoneware is today part of several major museum collections, including the Nationalmuseum, The Cooper-Hewitt Museum in New York, and the ceramic museum in Faenza.

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