-40%
Iroquois Impromptu Bridal White Ben Seibel Six Five-Piece Place Settings-30 Pcs
$ 190.08
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Mid-Century ModernIroquois
Fine Porcelain China
IMPROMPTU
Bridal White
Ben Seibel, American(1918-1967)
Estate Find
This is a superb Iroquois fine porcelain china
set of six
place settings
in the Impromptu Bridal White pattern designed by Ben Seibel.
T
his pattern was produced by
Iroquois
from 1956 to 1969
and is now discontinued.
Totaling thirty
pieces of china, there are f
ive pieces to
each
place setting comprising of one dinner plate, one salad plate, one
bread and butter plate, and one footed cup and saucer. The dinner
plates are
10 1/4", salad
8
"
, bread and butters 6 1/2
", saucers 4
" and cups 2 7
/8" in height. Each of the five pieces are in excellent, almost like-new condition, with minimal knife marks, no chips, cracks, breaks or repairs.
Ben Seibel, born in Newark, New Jersey in 1918, grew up in Manhattan, where his mother started a shop in Greenwich Village selling her own jewelry and fashion designs. Seibel began pursuing a degree in architecture at Columbia University after studying painting under Louis Schanker and sculpture under Leo Amino. After putting his education on hold for a three-and-a-half year term of service in the Air Force, Seibel returned to New York City in 1945, enrolling at Pratt Institute with a concentration in industrial design. He never completed his degree, instead starting a studio that he maintained alongside a small staff until his death in 1985 at the age of 67. Seibel is best known for his tableware designs, drawing influences from his study of sculpture and travels in Japan. His work in ceramics was prolific and wide-ranging in style, reaching prominence in the 1950s with his Informal and Impromptu lines for Iroquois China.