Tile
Object NameTile
Artist / Maker
Christian Petersen
(Danish - American, 1885 - 1961)
Manufacturer
Iowa State University, Ceramic Engineers
Studio
Iowa College Pottery
(American (Ames, IA), Iowa State College, 1920 - 1939)
Date1934-1939
Mediumceramic , framed in wood
Dimensions6 1/2 × 6 1/2 × 1 1/16 in. (16.5 × 16.5 × 2.7 cm)
ClassificationsDecorative Arts, Ceramics
Credit LineGift of Louise Beckemeyer. In the Christian Petersen Art Collection, Christian Petersen Art Museum, University Museums, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa.
Object numberUM2004.130
Status
Not on viewCollections
CultureAmerican
Label TextThe Ceramic Engineering Department at Iowa State College gained
recognition in the early 20th century, largely due to the efforts of
Paul E. Cox, Associate Professor and later Chair of the department
(1920–1939). Cox, an accomplished ceramic artist and engineer,
collaborated with artist Christian Petersen, sculptor-in-residence
from 1934 to 1955, on major projects, including the terra cotta relief
murals for the Dairy Industry Building’s courtyard and the Veterinary
Medicine Mural. These murals, made of multiple relief panels, were
fired in the “Cox kiln” located in the ceramic engineering laboratory.
Cox played an instrumental role in determining the unglazed surface
for the works and used these large-scale commissions as teaching
opportunities for his students.
Under Cox’s leadership, the student chapter of the American
Ceramic Society became actively involved in VEISHEA, Iowa State’s
annual spring celebration. As part of VEISHEA, students under
Cox’s direction produced hundreds of ceramic souvenirs to be sold
or given away to campus visitors. Three such tile souvenirs were
designed by Christian Petersen. The tile depicting a man shaping a
clay vessel shows a squatting male figure, carefully incised, with
the figure filling the tile’s space and showing detailed upper body
muscles evoking the classical ideal of the nude. Two unglazed
versions of this tile are in the collection as well and has Christian
Petersen’s chop mark in the upper right. The tile is thought to have
been titled “Thinker,” possibly due to its resemblance to Auguste
Rodin’s famous sculpture of the same name.
Markings#969 marked on back in pencil
PeriodArts and Crafts
Locations
- (not entered) Iowa State University, Brunnier Main Storage
Object Name: Tiles on Fireplace
Moravian Pottery and Tile Works
1925
Object number: U88.76
