Blå blom, Berså and Nobel – all well-known Gustavsberg tableware adorning festive tables and adding a special touch to everyday meals over the years. With its exhibition titled Festive Table Settings! 200 Years in the Heartland of Porcelain, the Gustavsberg Porcelain Museum is celebrating the fact that the porcelain factory has been supplying Swedish homes with porcelain for two centuries.
Since its inception in 1825, the Gustavsberg Porcelain Factory’s popular designs and carefully crafted details have defined the atmosphere for those festive occasions in life. Focusing on tableware and set tables, this anniversary exhibition showcases items that reflect aesthetic ideals and innovative developments. It also provides an insight into the rich history of the factory. The exhibition shows how porcelain has evolved over time, from the grand tableware of the nineteenth century to the iconic shapes and patterns that defined the twentieth century.
From splendour to practicality
Nineteenth-century industrialisation resulted in the emergence of an affluent middle class. Organising grand dinners and suppers was a way for people to show off their status and wealth. The ideal was to hold lavish banquets using hundreds of pieces of tableware, all intricately designed and richly decorated to match the scale of the feast. The exhibition features a selection of these pieces.
Economic challenges in the early twentieth century led to the streamlining of production and design. At Gustavsberg, this development continued when Kooperativa Förbundet (The Swedish cooperative wholesale society) bought the factory in 1937. Models were simplified and made stackable and multifunctional. The aim was to create quality products at low prices and household tableware that would fit in the kitchen cupboards of even the most cramped of homes. The exhibition features table settings with efficient innovations dating back to that period.
Celebrations and special touches
In the mid-twentieth century, designers such as Wilhelm Kåge and Stig Lindberg played prominent roles as artistic directors. The exhibition features a number of examples of their iconic works, from Kåge’s functionalist forms to Lindberg’s playful and innovative designs. The table settings show how art and everyday life could be united by means of utilitarian items that were both practical and aesthetically pleasing.
The highlights of the exhibition include the renowned Nobel tableware, specially created for that grandest of occasions, the Nobel Banquet. Bearing Karin Björquist’s elegant design, the Nobel tableware illustrates the factory’s ability to combine tradition with innovation. This will provide you with an insight into the assignment that led to the creation of this exclusive tableware.

The Nobel tableware. Photo: Viktor Fordell/Nationalmuseum.
A special touch for life’s wonderful moments
The exhibition Festive Table Settings! 200 Years in the Heartland of Porcelain is not merely a glimpse into the history of Gustavsberg. Table settings from different eras provide you with the opportunity to reflect on how design and craftsmanship have changed over time, and also on what endures – the desire to create beautiful table settings that add a special touch to all those wonderful moments in life.The exhibition will run throughout the anniversary year and offers all porcelain lovers the opportunity to experience how Gustavsberg has been setting tables with style for two hundred years of celebrations.
Curator
Ulrika Schaeder
Scenographer
Joakim E Werning
The celebration of 200 years in the heartland of porecelain
At the Gustavsberg Porcelain Museum, part of Nationalmuseum, we are celebrating two hundred years of craftsmanship with half-price admission during the anniversary year, from 4 April until 31 December.
Nationalmuseum is also celebrating the anniversary with a Stig Lindberg exhibition at Läckö Castle.