Description
About the Author
Ashley Thorpe is a collector of ceramics, a writer, performer and an academic. He has seriously collected contemporary British studio ceramics for almost twenty years and has extensive knowledge of the field. His first book Contemporary British Ceramics: Beneath the Surface was published by The Crowood Press in 2021. Its publication was marked by an exhibition of the same name, which was held at Eton College. In 2019, the prestigious international journal Ceramics: Art + Perception awarded him their inaugural writing prize for an essay on the work of Tessa Eastman. In 2022, he was invited to become a Trustee for the Maak Foundation, an organisation established to support and promote British studio ceramics. He currently teaches Drama at Royal Holloway, University of London, where he gained his PhD.
Reviews
This book takes on the debate around what makes ceramics an art form and how it has developed. The 'vessel', it seems, is a contentious word in ceramics. The book has noted, debates surrounding the validity of the term reveal 'tensions about the relative value of the pot, the vessel and the object, and the status between the useful and the useless in the art world. The debate as to whether ceramics should be regarded as 'art' or 'craft' . A very thoughtful read.
-- Paul Bailey, Emerging Potters Magazine Oct-Dec 23 * Emerging Potters Magazine Oct-Dec 23 *Book Information
ISBN 9780719842429
Author Ashley Thorpe
Format Hardback
Page Count 240
Imprint The Crowood Press Ltd
Publisher The Crowood Press Ltd
Weight(grams) 843g
Dimensions(mm) 280mm * 215mm * 19mm