Camille Le Tallec

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Camille Le Tallec (November 9, 1906 - August 21, 1991) was a French porcelain craftsman and artist.

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[edit] Biography

Le Tallec was born in Paris. He graduated in 1929 from the prestigious École du Louvre in Paris with a thesis on the Nast porcelain of the 18th century. He then took over, in 1930, the familial hand-painted porcelain studio founded in Belleville (Paris) early in the century.

Rapidly, Le Tallec decided to continue in the tradition of the Vincennes porcelain and Sèvres porcelain, expanding the small and local business, the Atelier Le Tallec. In thirty years, the studio created hand-painted porcelain tablewares for famous individuals such as HM Elizabeth II of England, HM Mohammed V and HM Hassan II of Morroco, or the French Republic, amongst others.

In 1961, Le Tallec started a fruitful collaboration the with silver and jewelry firm Tiffany & Co which led in 1990 to the Atelier Le Tallec's incorporation into the American company, one year before his death in Paris. Tiffany's and Le Tallec designed successful original and private porcelain patterns that can be seen both at the Viaduc des Arts of the promenade plantée in Paris's XIIe arrondissement and in all Tiffany's stores in the United-States.

Atelier Le Tallec was inducted as a member of the Grands Ateliers de France (the fifty best studios in France) in 2000.

Over 60 years, Le Tallec has maintained traditional hand-painted porcelain. He preserved and revisited about 250 original and historical patterns signed by the Le Tallec's marks.

Le Tallec also acquired from 1935 to 1955 prestigious pieces of European porcelains.[1] His exceptional collection was dispersed by auction in 1990, and some masterpieces acquired by international museums.

He was a Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur appointed in 1976 by a schoolmate of his: Edgar Faure, then president of the French National Assembly.

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] References

  1. ^ Un collectionneur de céramiques par Georges Lefebvre dans L'Estampille - L'Objet d'art nº239 septembre 1990, p76-83.

[edit] Source

  • (French) This article is partially or entirely translated from the article Camille Le Tallec on the french Wikipédia.

[edit] Links

Atelier Le Tallec website

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