LEO - V


Antoine DuBois Belgian Art Nouveau Two-Handled Vase with Incised Ancient Lion (LEO Design)

 

Lions have enjoyed a long history in the decorative arts.  This rampant lion—incised upon a Belgian Art Nouveau vase—looks like he could have come from Minoan Crete or Mycenaean Greece.  It is true that ancient themes often have been "recycled" by later artists—especially after a new archaeological discovery is made, inspiring new takes on old artworks.

This two-handled stoneware vase was made in Belgium by Antoine DuBois (1869-1949), probably around 1920.  Initial excavations as Knosos, the remarkable palace on the island of Crete, began in 1877.  Much archaeological progress was made in the earliest years of the Twentieth Century—right before this vase was conceived.  Crete is considered, by many, the "cradle of Western Civilization."  Crete's Minoan art and civilization (3000-1150 BC) inspired the rest of the Mediterranean (and all of the West).  Crete's strategic island location, in the middle of the Mediterranean) made it an important transfer hub of knowledge, art and commerce.  

Click on the photo above to learn more about this handsome vase.

More handsome LEOs tomorrow and in the days to come.

Though our Greenwich Village store is now permanently closed, LEO Design is still alive and well!  Please visit our on-line store where we continue to sell Handsome Gifts (www.LEOdesignNYC.com)

To arrange a visit our Pittsburgh showroom (by private appointment only), please call 917-446-4248.