Rating and value of Picasso Madoura plates
If you own a work by or after the artist Pablo Picasso in collaboration with the Madoura studio, and would like to know its value, our state-approved experts and auctioneers will offer you their appraisal services. Our specialists will carry out a free appraisal of your work, and provide you with a precise estimate of its current market value. Then, if you wish to sell your work, we will guide you towards the best possible arrangement to obtain the optimum price.
Rating and value of Picasso Madoura plates
The works born of the collaboration between Pablo Picasso and Suzanne Ramié were produced in the Madoura studio from 1938 onwards. Most of these works are in ceramic, but there are also a number in terracotta and earthenware. Together, the two artists produced everyday objects such as vases, dishes, pitchers and plates, as well as a few sculptures, even though there are relatively few of these on the art market, always in the Provencal tradition. The plates from this collaboration fetch between €820 and €13,000. A plate called " Visage ", made in white earthenware sold for €13,000 in 2023, while it was estimated at between €4,000 and €6,000.
Order of value from a simple work to the most prestigious
Type of plate | Result |
|---|---|
"Picador "plate | From €820 to €2,850 |
"Toros" plate | From €1,000 to €4,600 |
"Birds" plate | From €1,500 to €5,000 |
"Face" plate | From €1,150 to €13,000 |
Estimate in less than 24h
Style and technique of Picasso Madoura works
At the Madoura workshop, Picasso and Suzanne Ramié explore anthropomorphic and zoomorphic forms with fascination. They fashioned a myriad of creatures, from hieratic owls and majestic birds to owls, fish and white doves. Madoura's pitchers come in a wide variety of shapes and materials: earthenware, glazed ceramics and terracotta. The result can vary from one work to the next, depending on the animal chosen and the colors used.
L'atelier Madoura and the collaboration with Picasso
Madoura is a pottery workshop created in 1938 by the couple Suzanne and Georges Ramié, in Vallauris, a town nestled in the hills between Antibes and Cannes. During a summer vacation in 1946, in the company of Françoise Gilot, painter and writer, Suzanne Ramié gave Pablo Picasso his first tour of Madoura's admirable pottery workshop. He was amazed. The Ramié couple diligently encourage him to model Madoura clay, serving up on a silver platter to the illustrious artist a new way to exercise his dazzling creativity.
The imprint of Picasso x Madoura works on their time
Picasso creates over 3 600 ceramic pieces at the Madoura workshop that are the fruit of the encounter between Suzanne Ramié and Picasso. Picasso's ceramics reveal reckless exploration and creative spontaneity. He relentlessly investigates the use of ceramics, both the secrets of its technique and its aesthetics. Picasso succeeded in bringing to life new artistic formalisms that he had already been trying to approach since his Cubist period, by combining sculpture, painting and printing techniques. By virtue of their third dimension, ceramic objects provide a new playground for the artist, lending semantic and conceptual significance to his remarkable use of surface and volume. In this way, he expresses in three dimensions what he had hoped to communicate through his painted canvases, in this case without perspective, laws or academic rules. What's more, these ceramics require a great deal of skill to be able to paint them without knowing the final rendering, which appears once the firing is complete. Picasso offers his art to a new public able to own a work by the artist thanks to more accessible prices.
The plates resulting from this collaboration are particularly prized and sought-after works for their originality, their decorative aspect but also their utilitarian aspect.
The Madoura workshop's presence on the auction market
These ceramics became a fixture in homes and were quickly snapped up by collectors. Between 1950 and 1960, many distinguished artists such as Marc Chagall, Victor Brauner, Foujita and Matisse took their turn at La Poterie Madoura. The studio acquired such renown that in 1953, Suzanne Ramié was awarded the Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur.
Recognizing the signature on Picasso Madoura works
It's important to have your work appraised, as there are unfortunately many forgeries. The stamp (" édition Picasso Madoura ") and the serial number indicate the authenticity of the work.
Knowing the value of a Picasso x Madoura plate
If you happen to own a " Picasso Madoura " artwork, don't hesitate to request a free valuation via our website form. A member of our team will contact you promptly with an estimate of the value of your work, and will provide you with all the relevant information. If you're thinking of selling your work, our specialists will also be on hand to help you find alternatives for selling it at the best possible price.
Estimate in less than 24h
Discover in the same theme
Rating and value of works, drawings, paintings by Marino Mar...
Marino Marini is a twentieth-century Italian painter and sculptor who produced a wide range of works that are sought-after and quoted at auction.
Learn more >
Rating and value of furniture, lamps, tables by Pierre Chare...
Pierre Chareau is a twentieth-century architect and designer whose furniture is highly prized at auction. Estimated in 24h.
Learn more >
Rating and value of bronzes, sculptures, drawings and painti...
Georges Guyot is a French animal sculptor and painter who has produced works that are highly rated and valued at auction.
Learn more >
Secure site, anonymity preserved
Auctioneer approved by the State
Free and certified estimates