Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Bernard on the Wheel


Bernard Leach is, without a doubt, the best known and most prominent of British studio potters. Born in Hong Kong, he was taken almost immediately to Japan by his grandparents. He came to England ...
Bernard Leach is, without a doubt, the best known and most prominent of British studio potters.
Born in Hong Kong, he was taken almost immediately to Japan by his grandparents.
He came to England at the age of ten for schooling.
In 1909 he returned to Japan to teach etching which he had himself learnt from Frank Brangwyn.
After ten years of life in the East - both Japan and China - he met Hamada.
The following year they both came to England and set up the Leach Pottery at St Ives.
The years between the wars were hard for Leach; he spent much time re-building kilns, experimenting with materials, travelling - but not achieving much critical or financial success.
It was not until after the Second World War, and the publication of his first book, A Potters' Book, that he became widely recognised as a master in his field.
He continued to pot until 1972, but did not stop his ceaseless travelling.
The Victoria and Albert Museum in London held an exhibition - The Art of Bernard Leach - in 1977, and in 1979 he died.

1 comment:

  1. Thanks for the link, I was wondering where the Israeli visitors were coming from on my site meter, (it sometimes can't see referrers).
    Like I said, Isaac's old pottery is quite close to me, there's another, contemporary to Isaac Button's pottery, about twenty miles to the north.
    It is still operating, digging clay on site, there have been potters there for a long time, records show them being fined in about 1450 for digging clay out and leaving pits in the road, but there were also potteries nearby as far back as the roman occupation two thousand years ago.
    http://www.littlethorpepotteries.co.uk/history.asp
    There is, or was, a film of Roland Curtis throwing, I think it was called "Bigware", made in the late fifties or early sixties, but I have not been able to track down a copy.
    Shalom!

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