3/15/2012...An Update. A Disclosure.
I know miniscule about Italy. Dabble in pockets of its mystery. And write to remember. I am pulled to, enticed by, long for it and things Italian...small and large...and breathable. The people, their language, the texture, the jewel tones of the culture, the sumptuous food, the accumulated centuries of tradition, passion, and Life -- they all nurture me, mesmerize me when I am there.

For a short time (and at the time I began this blog), I was drawn into an adventure with imported
Italian pottery, but could not persist. However, The Blog continues & exists as a bit of a playground for me. A place to play, to capture my explorations and the riot of colors, the intricacies of Italy, the artistry of Italian design, the sheer joy of Celebrating Life every day. I've neither a planned destination nor a schedule. It's the Journey that draws me. I welcome your company, yet ask you to understand, I do this for me.

Oct 19, 2011

Italian Pottery Patterns. What you like will influence us.

FARFALLO VARIO
OLIVE

RAFFAELLESCO Classico
RAFFAELLESCO Moderno
Full details with more images are in a lead story on Oct 10 and a second story the same day.  Your COMMENTS here or there will help guide us.  Which of these four pattern(s) do you like and why?   (There was a more formal survey, but technical difficulties ensued...so it's gone!)

Oct 15, 2011

My articles on Italian Ceramics have been published...in Italian

You want to talk about a KICK??!!  Cruising the internet yesterday, I found an article I had written in English (of course!).  It had been translated and re-published in Italian!!  On a blog called "BE . com."  Then this morning, I saw that my site had visitors from Argentina.  And they came to The Blog from reading a second of my articles, also re-published by the same blog.

Oh! that my Italian were so fluent that I could have written the original like this.  Look how sexy the two titles look...
Cerámica italiana – cómo vajillas de cerámica se convierte en arte  
and... 
Cerámica italiana hoy – las complejidades y el Arte de un proceso de siglos de cerámica

Just sharing the experience. How many of you can read these two titles?  Please POST and let me know.

The Argentina and Italy connection...

As for the Argentina-Italy connection, here are two background statistics and one really lovely YouTube video I researched:
  • Up to 25 million Argentines have some degree of Italian descent, around 60% of the total population (Source: Wikipedia 2001 and preliminary 2010 census).  
  • Back in 1905, 40 percent of the Buenos Aires' population was of Italian origin.   They had immigrated to Argentina to build national ports, railroads and theaters and to help turn Argentina into one of the world's richest nations.  (Source: Kevin Hall, Herald World Staff Writer, July 8, 2001 -- a reverse immigration article entitled Italians Fleeing Argentina. ) 
  • Tribute to Italian Immigrants to Argentina - Non Piangere per me Argentina.  Milva is the  Italian singer; you'll recognize the melody, no doubt, if not the words.

Oct 10, 2011

So tell me which of these pottery designs you love best...

I went to the New York International Gift Fair in August.  (Now I tell you!)  Wish you could have been with me.  I had a blast!

I went to touch and breath in some of the newest and most dazzling work in Italian pottery.  And, especially delightful, I met for the first time Luca Sambuco from Ceramiche Sambuco.  Luca and I had been emailing back and forth for a number of months, so it was super to meet him in person -- and his brother Luciano.  Now, I have the honor of giving you a peak at some of the new designs they brought to the New York Gift Fair.

Here we go...
 
Do you know who this is?
I'm testing your knowledge here (just a little) of Italian pottery design.  Take a second look...
I want to pinch their cheeks.
If you said, Raffaellesco, good on you!  This is the time-honored, much loved Raffaellesco pattern.  (Another time, if you like, I will tell you more about the Raffaellesco myth and how it came to be one of the most popular pottery designs.)

For now, I want to show off more of the work.
ABOVE:  The traditional, classic presentation of Raffaellesco pattern.












ABOVE & BELOW:  Sambuco's more modern application in design & form of these whimsical, mythical dragons.  Notice how the "canvass" gives the dragon greater white space in which to show off.  I'd call the above platter shape a "squared octagonal."

I have a soft spot for square plates.  And I love the Raffaellesco dragons peaking around the edges.


Moving now into the olive grove...
Luscious and plump!  A pattern needing no more detailed name than simply, "Olive."  Look at the wonderful shapes of the bowls!

 And finally (for now)...
FARFALLE...Italian for Butterfly.  Colorful, vivid, warm, delicate and strong -- all in one.  This design is Vario Farfalle.

MyItalianPottery invites your feedback. Help overcome our bias. We love it all!

In another post today, you got a peak at a few new Italian ceramic pottery designs.   I took the photos at the New York International Gift Fair (August 14-18) in the exhibit space of Ceramiche Sambuco while visiting with Luca Sambuco.

This is not an official announcement (yet), but MyItalianPottery has been working with Sambuco to offer you some of their collections.  I would like to start this new venture by asking you to help select "the work."  The pottery designs and forms I love are not nearly as important as what you love.  I pretty much LOVE IT ALL.  So I invite your feedback.

Obviously, the choices presented in my photos don't begin to represent all of what we intend eventually to offer you.  I'm just looking for some of your favorites as the best place to start.

So I encourage you to take the survey (SURVEY IS CLOSED, SORRY!)...but please give as much feedback as you'd like in the  COMMENTS section below .  (As a reader of MyItalianPottery - The Blog, you are sharing plans we have not yet introduced on our website.  Stay in touch for other "inside stories" by joining us.  Sign up today!)

Grazie mille!




Oct 8, 2011

Hand Painted Lemons - Bold & Luscious - Favorite Italian Ceramics Theme.

A design called Frutta
Do you know that lemons show up in Pompeian wall paintings? The Italians have been cultivating them since ancient Roman times if not earlier.  No wonder lemons are so prominent in Italian pottery designs today.  Tradition!  We present many collections at My Italian Pottery that beautifully capture this special frutta..  In some they are the star of the show; in others they share the "canvas" with other yummy fruits.
Frutta Mista Design
Alcantara Design

 
Limone Design
              

Oct 5, 2011

Correction from Ellis Island...

Pop-Pop so handsome.
I need to make a correction about my grandparents immigration dates -- and it's pretty cool.  I got into Ellis Island records and found them bothPop-Pop arrived at Ellis Island in 1907 and Mom-Mom in 1911.  In my previous post (on 9/29) explaining the possible roots of my Italian ceramic pottery obsession, I said my grandparents immigrated from Italy in 1910.  That date came from family notes.  But 1907 and 1911 are official.

If you have family to trace, I highly recommend this site.  It's a blast...and it's free!

Ellis Island Port of New York records.

You'll only need the passenger's last name.  First name is optional.  If you have exact year of birth, terrific.  If not, they've got a field for approximate year of birth.  Select Gender -- and click Start Search.  It's that easy.

I now even know that Mom-Mom and Pop-Pop both sailed from Naples -- and the names of the ships they arrived on -- the Virgina and the Konig Albert.   (The photo above is the earliest I have of Pop-Pop.  I wish I had an even younger picture, but I especially love this one!)

Happy researching!  Let us know if you're search is successful.   Would love to hear your story!

Sep 30, 2011

Biscotti cookie jars make me smile! How 'bout you?

Frutta Biscotti Cookie Jar

Firenze Biscotti Cookie Jar

Girasole Biscotti Jar

I hear you're not supposed to have "favorite" children...but Biscotti Cookie Jars are the exception to almost all my "rules."  I don't know whether it's all their fun shapes...or their job of housing special treats...or just the plain fun of saying the word B I S C O T T I !!! How can you look at them without smiling??!!

I'll bet the sunflower in the Girasole pattern follows the sun.  And, if you ever run out of lemons for tea or cooking, just borrow one from the Frutta jar. These three are just a tease...there are other designs and shapes in MyItalianPottery's Biscotti Cookie Jar collection.

Sep 29, 2011

My Italian pottery obsession. How it began.

Mom-Mom & Pop-Pop

Sure, it's because it's pottery beyond mere utility...it's arte!  Sure it's the scrumptious colors.  (Did you ever think of colors as being scrumptious?)  Sure it's the magic of touching the work and imagining the potter and designer that created it.

But what may really explain my ongoing love affair with Italian pottery is -- it's Italian...and so am I.  Mom-Mom and Pop-Pop (that's how I called my Mom's parents), immigrated to the east coast of United States from Italy in 1910.  Homemade wine, garden fresh tomatoes, basil and garlic cooked into vats of pasta sauce, and hand-formed and hand-rolled gnocchi that Mom-Mom and I made in the basement to surprise the family...all that fuels my DNA and the greatest memories...and thus my obsession.

The Italian pottery is just my excuse to stay in close touch with my heritage.  And gives me excuses (I don't need) to visit as often as possible.

Mom-Mom & Me
(Are you still reading the second paragraph and wondering "What is a "gnocchi?"  Well, they're little potato & flour (bullet) pasta.  Bullet?  Yeah, they're like lead when they hit your stomach.  You can't eat many because you fill up really fast...but they were soooo very delicious when Mom-Mom made them.  My earlier reference to the basement was just one particular day when we led the family to believe we were doing wash in the cellar, but we were really making gnocchi for an Easter surprise.  I was probably four years old and Mom-Mom's best co-conspirator!)

Thanks for making me tell you that story.  I'm smiling from ear to ear right now.