Alessio Tasca, plate/centerpiece in perforated, glazed stoneware, Italy, 1977
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Description
In 1967, together with Ettore Leoni, a technician from Nove, Vicenza, where Tasca opened his first ceramic atelier in the 1950s, he developed the first extruder, a machine that allowed him to design and produce his first rectangular-section works through extrusion. He exhibited them for the first time in Treviso in 1968, at the "Studio d'Arte Arturo Martini. That same year, he participated to the 14th Milan Triennale with 17 extruded pieces, including the Cornovaso, perhaps the most representative "form" of this cycle. The Triennale was occupied as part of the 1968 protests. Tasca actively participated, throwing down and destroying all the exhibited works.
In 1972, the Victoria and Albert Museum purchased a Cornovaso, which is still exhibited in the Decorative Arts section of the London museum. The international jury of the 15th Milan Triennale, where he exhibited ceramics and acrylic glass, awarded him the Gold Medal Diploma for the methacrylate production created by the Fusina laboratory in Nove based on his own design. -
More Information
Documentation: Signed Origin: Italy Period: 1950-1979 Materials: perforated stoneware Condition: Good. A small chip has been carefully restored. The plate is in perfect conditions. Creation Date: 1977 Styles / Movements: Modern, Mid Century Patterns: Abstract, Geometric, Modern Dealer Reference #: CAPO1225 Incollect Reference #: 832884 -
Dimensions
W. 15.75 in; H. 1.97 in; D. 16.14 in; W. 40 cm; H. 5 cm; D. 41 cm;
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