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  2. Lucie Rie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucie_Rie

    The studio remained almost unchanged during the 50 years she occupied it and has been reconstructed in the Victoria and Albert Museum's ceramics gallery. Rie was a friend of Bernard Leach , one of the leading figures in British studio pottery in the mid-20th century, and she was impressed by his views, especially concerning the "completeness ...

  3. Shōji Hamada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shōji_Hamada

    Mashiko village pottery, Japan, 1937 [videorecording]: pottery-making in Japan.1 videocassette (VHS) (22 min.): si., black and white; 1/2 in. Shows the pottery techniques used by Mashiko potters. From the 1850s, these potters produced utilitarian ware for local markets, but the post-war period saw a change with the influence of potter Shoji Hamada.

  4. Ian Sprague - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Sprague

    The Mungeribar Pottery's mark is a Macdonald's em impressed; Sprague's personal mark is a capital I over a horizontal separator and the Morse code for S—three dots. Some pots are signed "IanS". [20] Drawings and paintings are signed "Ian Sprague"; work signed simply "Sprague" is generally by his nephew Leslie.

  5. Studio pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Studio_pottery

    Studio pottery is pottery made by professional and amateur artists or artisans working alone or in small groups, making unique items or short runs. Typically, all stages of manufacture are carried out by the artists themselves. [ 1 ]

  6. Janet Leach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet_Leach

    Janet Darnell Leach (15 March 1918 – 12 September 1997), was an American studio potter working in later life at the Leach Pottery in St Ives, Cornwall in England. After studying pottery at Black Mountain, North Carolina under Shoji Hamada, a visiting artisan, she traveled to Japan to work with him.

  7. Katherine Pleydell-Bouverie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katherine_Pleydell-Bouverie

    Pleydell-Bouverie described herself as "a simple potter. I like a pot to be a pot, a vessel with a hole in it, made for a purpose". [8] In a letter to Bernard Leach written 29 June 1930, she said "I want my pots to make people think, not of the Chinese, but of things like pebbles and shells and birds' eggs and the stones over which moss grows.