-
Absolutely gorgeous work of art. Has maker mark on the bottom. "T" in the center is the factory it was made. Warm tones of earthy Brown's to cream and white. The glaze goes from high gloss and fades to Matte towards the bottom. Perfect condition.
The pottery began with two Urbach brothers and merged with the Rudolf Ditmar factory in 1919, becoming Ditmar-Urbach from 1919-1938. The company and factory was then seized by Nazis in 1938 making it part of Ostmark-Ceramic, that became nationalized in 1945 where the Ditmar Urbach name came to an end. The Urbach brothers and family did not survive WW11. They were true artists and innovators, which is why their surviving work is highly sought after.
Absolutely gorgeous work of art. Has maker mark on the bottom. "T" in the center is the factory it was made. Warm tones of earthy Brown's to cream and white. The glaze goes from high gloss and fades to Matte towards the bottom. Perfect condition.
The pottery began with two Urbach brothers and merged with the Rudolf Ditmar factory in 1919, becoming Ditmar-Urbach from 1919-1938. The company and factory was then seized by Nazis in 1938 making it part of Ostmark-Ceramic, that became nationalized in 1945 where the Ditmar Urbach name came to an end. The Urbach brothers and family did not survive WW11. They were true artists and innovators, which is why their surviving work is highly sought after.