We Have Mildred to Thank


Today’s blog is about my most favorite dishes in the entire world…Mottahedeh “Tobacco Leaf.” I’m going to go out on a limb today and do something a little bit different…I’m going to ask you to read an article regarding the woman we have to thank for these dishes. Why? Because it is always empowering to read a story about a woman who was generous, intelligent, self-motivated, quirky, and confident with an aesthetic eye who most likely did not get a boob job. I know it’s little bit long but it’s not like I’m asking you to read The Goldfinch, for God’s sake…

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The Porcelain Art Of Mottahedeh Knows No Age

By BARBARA GAMAREKIAN

Published: April 6, 1989

AS guests linger over after-dinner coffee at the White House and diplomats sip cocktails across the street at the newly restored Blair House, they are surrounded by what they suppose to be priceless porcelains: glorious Chinese export bowls holding lilies and freesia; olive dishes emblazoned with the American eagle, serving as ashtrays; a classic Tobacco Leaf epergne, filled with fruits and candy.

The ceramics are indeed beautiful - beautiful fakes. But Mildred Mottahedeh, the energetic, 80-year-old collector of Chinese export porcelains whose company, Mottahedeh & Company, produces these museum-quality reproductions, would cross swords with anyone who chose to employ such a disparaging term. Fake indeed. Good reproductions insure that works of art will be preserved for future generations.

 
''The originals are just too valuable to use,'' Mrs. Mottahedeh (pronounced MOT-teh-heh-dah) said recently as she guided an interviewer on a tour of the Mottahedeh & Company showroom at 225 Fifth Avenue, between 26th and 27th Streets, in Manhattan. ''They get broken. Light-fingered people make off with them.'' But even the reproductions are picked off as mementos, said Clement Conger, the curator who assembled a vaunted collection of fine furniture, paintings and china for the elegant suite of diplomatic reception rooms at the State Department. ''We used to use two sizes of some nice Chinese export trays, but they would slowly but surely disappear,'' he said. ''Now we just use the big ones because they are too large to slip into the pocket.''

Mildred Root Mottahedeh began collecting Japanese prints at the age of 13 after she moved to New York from Rumson, N.J., where she was born. ''And then I met my husband, who was a collector,'' she said. ''And we collected together. We were just two collecting nuts.'' She and her Iranian-born husband, Rafi Y. Mottahedeh, who died in 1978, opened their own importing business. In 1929, they began acquiring Oriental porcelains, ivories, jades and bronzes, amassing one of the world's finest private collections, some 2,000 pieces. In his foreword to ''China for the West,'' a two-volume book published in 1978 by Sotheby Parke Bernet of London about the Mottahedeh collection, Nelson A. Rockefeller - himself a collector of porcelain - declared it to be ''utterly fabulous, an artistic and cultural treasure without comparison in its field.''

 
In 1985, some 400 pieces were sold at Sotheby's, but Mrs. Mottahedeh's apartment in Manhattan and her house in Stamford, Conn., are still chockablock with treasures she rotates from storage. ''I have 18 rooms of things I love up in the country and five rooms of things I love in town,'' she said. ''Even my kitchen has antique porcelain on the walls.''

A privately held company, Mrs. Mottahedeh's ceramics concern does not release its sales figures. But it produces about 1,500 different items for more than 3,000 stores, from Tiffany & Company to small gift shops. The company also reproduces pieces in the collections of museums like the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Dallas Art Institute and the Musee des Art Decoratifs in Paris for sale in their shops. ''But we won't do a piece just because it is historic,'' Mrs. Mottahedeh said. ''It has to have character and usability.''

 
One of Mottahedeh's most popular designs is based on the Tobacco Leaf pattern originally made in China in the 18th century for export to Portuguese and Brazilian markets. The pattern incorporates 27 colors, with a small phoenix perching on the leaves of a nicotiana. It is used in the board room at Sotheby's in Manhattan and at the American become Embassy in London.

''It has a lot of dash and verve,'' Mrs. Mottahedeh said. ''And I make them so they can all go in the dishwasher. The gold won't come off. That is part of my women's movement.''

 
Mrs. Mottahedeh travels abroad five months a year, checking in at the two dozen manufacturers, primarily in Western Europe, that are contracted to produce her china.

''Darling,'' she explained, ''we have to manufacture abroad. We were a nation of farmers, and we have no tradition of pottery- and porcelain-making in this country. The tradition has to move on from generation to generation. They are even losing it now in England because they only want to do things that can be produced mechanically.''

Mrs. Mottahedeh, who also lectures and writes on the tradition and history of ceramics, wears her four-score years lightly. Like a jack-in-the-box, she jumps up to fetch a book from the next room; then she is off to check out statistics with a staff member; next, she is bustling about in search of a photograph of her great-grandchild, Jamie, to show off.

 
Mrs. Mottahedeh asserted she had no thoughts of slowing down, and recited her appointments for the day: a 12:30 luncheon, a board meeting, a dinner party. She also planned to review a manuscript over the weekend.

''I'll be 81 in August,'' she said. ''Maybe I'll think about retiring at 90.''

 
Wasn’t that a great article? Aren’t you glad you read it? How cool is Madame Mottahedeh? The article was written in 1989 when she was almost 81 years old! Unfortunately, she passed away in 2000. She gets even cooler though…

“Mme. Mottahedeh amassed enormous wealth during her lifetime, including one of the largest estates in Connecticut during the 1950s and 1960s, she gave nearly all her wealth away by establishing charities such as the Mottahedeh Development Services, building over 10 schools in Uganda, and many other endeavors.” – Wikipedia

              
My hearts swoons when I read stories about women like this. Now I even like the dishes more. What do you think? You can purchase the dishes HERE. They are super expensive but worth every penny.

 
Stay tuned for tomorrow’s dishes…Hint: “old-school.”
A toute!

11 comments:

  1. What an interesting article and I have always loved this pattern!

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  2. please keep the education going --love reading about unheard of people

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  3. They have an "outlet" store at the High Point Furniture market!

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  4. Thank you Mildred, and thank you for sharing her story. What an inspirational woman.

    I've only recently discovered your corner of the internet and have been savouring your backlog. So many inspirational moments captured here, educational, beautiful and witty as well...

    Greetings (& danke) from Düsseldorf.

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  5. I knew about Mildred M. making reproductions of lovely eighteenth-century patterns available, but I did not know of her wonderful, inspiring philanthropy. So worthy or esteem and admiration.

    Martha Dandridge Custis Washington took a set of Tobacco Leaf to Mt. Vernon after marrying George Washington.

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  6. This is my all time favorite dish design! I remember reading about Mme. Mottahedeh in a Metropolitan Museum of Art publication about 30 years-ago, and I used to linger over the photos in the catalog.

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  7. Greetings from Southern California!

    I am loving these posts on china! I was inspired after reading this one and looked them up on my local craigslist- maybe you have a friend in town who can snatch these beauties up:

    http://losangeles.craigslist.org/lgb/clt/4589903951.html
    http://losangeles.craigslist.org/lgb/clt/4589931232.html

    Thank you for all the inspiration and great writing! It's a daily treat.

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  8. I may not be a "color girl" but I a, all about that gorgeous pattern! It's amazing and so was she.

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  9. Love your post, as a ceramic teacher I have an obsession with china, cannot tell you how many dinner sets I have. Some would say it's obscene, I say I love it all.

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  10. Ellie, Margaret here. I continue to make my way through your old posts because you were/are the best. This is the second time I've read this particular post, and I just have to say . . . it fills me with utter rage and loathing, directed at MYSELF. You see, when I was registering for bridal china, I stupidly, STUPIDLY brought along my finance. I showed him this pattern and told him that I loved it, but he is a WASP and aescetic and BORING and he said, "Absolutely not! Too loud!"

    At that point in my relationship, I truly cared what he thought about these sort of things, and so I compromised, and we ended up with something lovely but very boring and hate myself for it. ARGH! Now where the F*CK am I going to come up with the $ to buy another dinner service?? First world problem, but I know you'd understand.

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