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Modern and Contemporary - International

Collection Info
Modern and Contemporary - International

At the heart of some of the most important developments of the twentieth century is the opposition between ceramic as a functional form, and ceramic as art. The first approach was expressed through the revival of studio pottery which is well illustrated in the Gardiner Museum’s collection of international ceramics. The movement originated in Britain by Bernard Leach in the 1920s and promoted hand-crafted pots for everyday life as a reaction against industry. At the same time, other artists working under the influence of Modernism, including Lucie Rie and Hans Coper, sought to liberate pottery from the imperative of function, treating the vessel as an art form. The collection also includes works by contemporary artists who use clay as a medium of sculptural expression.

The Gardiner Museum’s collection of international contemporary ceramics was established by Aaron Milrad, and has since been enriched by gifts from Claude and Christine Bissell, and Helen Gardiner, Iris and Jack Lieber, Elizabeth Lipsett, Michael and Mary Mason, Cawthra and Julyan Mulock, Diana Reitberger, and many others.

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Untitled
Artist / Maker: Hans Coper
c.1953
Object number: G03.2.1
Untitled
Artist / Maker: Hans Coper
c.1955
Object number: G03.2.2
Three mugs
Artist / Maker: Dame Lucie Rie DBE
c.1955
Object number: G03.2.5.1-3
Untitled
Artist / Maker: Dame Lucie Rie DBE
c.1955
Object number: G03.2.6
Spade Form
Artist / Maker: Hans Coper
c.1969
Object number: G18.5.2
Small Vessel
Artist / Maker: Hans Coper
Object number: G21.5.12
Small vessel with irregular rim
Artist / Maker: Hans Coper
Object number: G21.5.13
Vase
Artist / Maker: Hans Coper
1969
Object number: G21.7.1
Vase
Artist / Maker: Hans Coper
1967
Object number: G21.7.2