Ceramics: Art and Perception

Five Cubed

In 1939, Fortune Magazine ran an article on ceramics titled The art with an inferiority complex. Fast forward to 1961 and Rose Slivka proclaimed that ceramics had “broken new ground and challenged past traditions, suggested new meanings and possibilities to old functions and habits of seeing, and has won the startled attention of a world unprepared for the expected.”1

Indeed a great deal had changed in the intervening years; in late 1940s Japan the revolutionary artists of the Sodeisha Group radically challenged the conventional thinking, embedded in tradition, that had existed in ceramic art, while in the US groundbreaking artists such as Peter Voulkos and Jim Leedy emerged in the 1950s opening the door for future generations. This led to a view that, as In the UK during this period the towering figures of Bernard Leach and Hans Coper still loomed large, creating an environment in which, as Martina Margetts once observed, “eloquence triumphed over eclecticism.”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Ceramics: Art and Perception

Ceramics: Art and Perception6 min read
A Journey Painted in Clay: A Book in the Making
As one’s practice evolves, the dynamic is driven by the excitement of the next piece of work, the next firing, the next exhibition, one seldom stops to reflect on the journey taken. So it was for me until a chance conversation with a publisher at a b
Ceramics: Art and Perception5 min read
Fresh New Talent at the British Ceramics Biennial
Nurturing, inspiring and showcasing new talent are at the heart of what we do at the British Ceramics Biennial – and have been since we started our work back in 2009. The most prominent way that we do this is through our platform for emerging ceramic
Ceramics: Art and Perception13 min read
The Non-dualistic Beauty of Hun Chung Lee
It is widely known that Sōetsu Yanagi tried to establish a uniquely eastern aesthetic, different from western modern aesthetics, through Buddhist thinking. His craft theory, called ‘Mingei Theory’, was established through the concept of ‘nondualistic

Related