List of studio potters
Appearance
This is a list of notable studio potters. A studio potter is one who is a modern artist or artisan, who either works alone or in a small group, producing unique items of pottery in small quantities, typically with all stages of manufacture carried out by themselves.[1] Studio pottery includes functional wares such as tableware, cookware and non-functional wares such as sculpture. Studio potters can be referred to as ceramic artists, ceramists, ceramicists or as an artist who uses clay as a medium.
Australian studio potters
British studio potters
- Dan Arbeid[2]
- Gordon Baldwin
- Svend Bayer
- Dora Billington
- Clive Bowen
- Alan Caiger-Smith
- Michael Cardew
- Seth Cardew
- Michael Casson
- Bruce Chivers
- Kenneth Clark
- Nic Collins
- Joanna Constantinidis
- Emmanuel Cooper
- Waistel Cooper
- Hans Coper
- Jill and Peter Dick[3]
- Ken Eastman
- Elizabeth Fritsch
- Richard Godfrey
- Jane Hamlyn
- Lisa Hammond
- Mark Hewitt
- Vanessa Hogge
- Agnete Hoy
- Walter Keeler
- Gabriele Koch
- Bernard Leach
- David Leach
- Janet Leach
- John Maltby
- Martin Brothers
- Magdalene Odundo
- Colin Pearson
- Katherine Pleydell-Bouverie
- Lucie Rie
- Phil Rogers
- Katch Skinner
- Richard Slee
- Martin Smith
- Rupert Spira
- Julian Stair
- William Staite Murray
- Angus Suttie
- Marianne de Trey[4]
- Judith Trim
- Edmund De Waal
- Peter Wright
- Takeshi Yasuda
Canadian studio potters
Dutch studio potters
French studio potters
Hungarian studio potters
Japanese studio potters
New Zealand studio potters
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- Nola Barron
- Doreen Blumhardt
- Barry Brickell
- Len Castle
- Peter Lange
- Helen Mason
- John Parker
- Richard Parker
- Patricia Charlotte Perrin
- Mirek Smíšek
- Peter Stichbury
Turkish studio potters
United States studio potters
- Robert Arneson
- Rudy Autio
- Ralph Bacerra
- Bennett Bean
- Billy Al Bengston
- Sorcha Boru
- Rose Cabat
- Karita Coffey
- Dora De Larios
- Rupert Deese
- Chris Dagradi
- Ruth Duckworth
- Michelle Erickson
- Ken Ferguson
- Michael Frimkess[7]
- Laura Ann Fry
- Melvino Garretti
- John Glick
- Chris Gustin
- Edith Heath
- Otto and Vivika Heino
- Wayne Higby
- Linna Vogel Irelan
- Stephen Jepson
- Karen Karnes
- Doyle Lane
- Cliff Lee
- Roberto Lugo
- Warren MacKenzie
- Kirk Mangus
- Karl Martz
- John Mason
- Harrison McIntosh[7]
- Nan and Jim McKinnell
- Hideaki Miyamura
- Maria Longworth Nichols
- Richard Notkin
- George E. Ohr
- Winnie Owens-Hart
- Mark Pharis
- Henry Varnum Poor
- Kenneth Price
- Elsa Rady[7]
- Don Reitz
- Frederick Hurten Rhead
- Daniel Rhodes
- M. C. Richards
- Adelaïde Alsop Robineau
- Adrian Saxe
- Peter Shire
- Overbeck Sisters
- Edwin Scheier
- Mary Scheier
- Norm Schulman
- Paul Soldner
- Rudolf Staffel
- Toshiko Takaezu
- Akio Takamori
- Jack Troy
- Robert C. Turner
- Peter Voulkos
- Marguerite Wildenhain
- Bruce Winn
- Beatrice Wood
- Betty Woodman
See also
References
- ^ Emmanuel Cooper, Ten Thousand Years of Pottery. British Museum Press, 2000. ISBN 0-7141-2701-9.
- ^ "Dan Arbeid | The Times". thetimes.co.uk. 2015. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
- ^ https://www.20thcenturyforum.com/t7799-coxwold-pottery-peter-and-jill-dick
- ^ The inspiration of Marianne de Trey – necessity and decoration from cloth to clay: VADS: the online resource for visual arts - The inspiration of Marianne de Trey – necessity and decoration from cloth to clay, accessdate: May 29, 2016
- ^ "Round Closed Vessel, 1998". The Met. Retrieved 2020-01-21.
- ^ Miranda, Luis (2019-05-21). "Muere Hisae Yanase, la artista japonesa que ancló su sonrisa en Córdoba". sevilla (in Spanish). Retrieved 2020-01-13.
- ^ a b c American Museum of Ceramic Art (2013). Common Ground: Ceramics in Southern California, 1945-1975. Pomona, California: American Museum of Ceramic Art. pp. 200–204. ISBN 978-0981672854.