A color update to a classic form: Berlin interior designer Gisbert Pöppler created the Édition Quartolet for KPM, four Löberschalen in fashionable colors that the designer himself finds "idiosyncratic, exciting, and great fun." The bowls were designed in 1929 by Wilhelm Löber. Pöppler, a fan of the simple design for years, has now transferred his color-determined spatial thinking to porcelain. "The coloring celebrates
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The first outstanding product of the Günther von Pechmann era is the work of a hitherto little-known porcelain designer, Wilhelm Löber, whose design of the Löberschale in 1929 alone has gone down in the history not only of the Königliche Porzellan-Manufaktur Berlin, but also of 20th century utility porcelain.
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A new take on a classic form: Berlin interior designer Gisbert Pöppler created the Édition Quartolet for KPM, four Löberschalen in fashionable colors that the designer himself finds to be “independent, exciting and great fun.”
The bowls were designed in 1929 by Wilhelm Löber. Pöppler, a fan of the simple design for years, now transferred his color-determined spatial thinking to porcelain. “The coloring celebrates the shape of the design, the targeted use of orange emphasizes the otherwise rather invisible elements such as the rim and base on all four bowls.”
The bowls are designed as duos, two color combinations with reversed color placement. But they also possess radiance and momentum as solitaires. The four Löberschalen of the ÉDITION QUARTOLET are each limited to 25 pieces.
Gisbert Pöppler is an internationally celebrated interior designer with projects from London to the Eifel region. With his Berlin team, he designs spaces and furniture that are considered avant-garde throughout Germany in terms of style, form and color.