Wallpaper Design by Max Lauger
Illustration: Max Lauger. Wallpaper design, c1898.
Max Lauger is probably much better known for his work in ceramics with a
career that stretched from the 1890s to the 1940s. However, his ceramic
career was a self-taught one as he studied both fine art painting and
interior design at art school. It is interesting to note that Lauger had
started to experiment with ceramics as early as the 1880s, and
therefore any work he produced in other mediums and disciplines might
well have been affected by what turned out to be a nearly lifelong
creative journey in ceramics.
The three illustrations shown in this article are wallpaper designs that
Lauger produced in about 1898, the same year that he became a professor
at what is today Karlsruhe University, but at the time was known as an
Institute of Technology. Lauger had also set up his first independent
ceramic studio in 1895 so these design pieces are quite important
examples of surface pattern work produced by not only a practising
ceramicist but also that of an individual who taught at a practical
level, aspects of art, design and decoration.
These three wallpaper examples are refreshingly open and unstructured
for the period. They bare little resemblance to any of the standard
forms of French or German Art Nouveau, and although having a passing
similarity to at least some aspects of an Arts & Crafts sensibility,
they are in fact much closer to a form of Modernist approach to pattern
work whereby most of the compositional work is flat and although
representational, the wallpaper designs are more interested in the
colour and flow of the design, observational accuracy being secondary.
Illustration: Max Lauger. Wallpaper design, c1898.
Being a ceramicist by nature Lauger has tailored these decorative
examples to reflect his interests and discoveries in the world of
ceramics. Anyone who has observed the surface pattern work produced by a
ceramicist will at once notice how clear, clean and precise the
compositions are. Much of the pattern work is lacking in over-detailing
and most compositions are outlined in order to segregate or at least
highlight them from their backgrounds. Colour is also important and this
is another tool that is used to accentuate elements of the pattern,
giving it instant appeal and a definite identity. It is a shame that
these examples are not in colour as it would have been interesting to
note how Lauger used colour representation. However, they are still fine
examples of surface pattern work and can be seen as being a breath of
creative fresh air in a period where the sometimes over stylization of
the Art Nouveau movement could easily become over played and
predictable.
Ceramicists can often produce some of the best surface pattern work and
have successfully combined careers in ceramics, textiles and wallpaper,
particularly from the 1950s onwards. The lack of textures and
mark-making in this style of design assure that the pattern work is
clear, concise and practical. This has much to do with the nature of
ceramics itself which is often concerned more with the over-layering of
slips, rather than the indenting of texture and mark-making. However,
this is not universal and there are of course ceramicists that do use
texture and mark-making to great effect.
Lauger may well not have produced much remembered work outside of his
chosen discipline. However, these examples give some indication as to
how the structure and makeup of a particular discipline can
fundamentally challenge the conception of that discipline. By sometimes
restructuring the guidelines, a relative outsider to a particular
speciality can achieve a result that while not challenging the
discipline itself, does lend itself to opening up the range of
possibilities that can be achieved.
Illustration: Max Lager. Wallpaper design, c1898.



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