Showing posts with label Dartington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dartington. Show all posts

Monday, 20 December 2010


Power of Place needs your support. There are over 150 artists involved and the show is going to be held in a run down building with almost no electricity. Some of the largest costs are insurance, a catalogue and generating electricity so we need your help. The fund raising campaign set up on Wefund is based on an American model of a lot people giving a little. The only drawback is that the money won't reach us unless we hit our wefund target. Any pledges are gratefully received for what will be a unique exhibition. http://www.wefund.co.uk/

Sunday, 28 November 2010

Aller Park
Exhibition venue



A surprising photograph of Aller Park taken in the thirties, not long after it was built.

Image courtesy of the Bosence family

Thursday, 25 November 2010

Exhibition

Alice Leach
At
The Dartington Printmakers




'We dined on zebra and leaves'
Collagraph by Alice Leach

Friday, 19 November 2010


The Early Years

Bernard Forrester
Dartington, 1932 - 1963
'For me, pottery is calling on memories of experience and then being able to reach into the kiln and hold and see the result of this matching.'




Bernard Forrester first came to Dartington to help build Bernard Leach's kiln in 1932. When Leach departed, Forrester stayed behind at the request of the then headmaster W. B. Curry, and began to teach pottery at Foxhole and, from 1947, at the Adult Eductaion Centre. Apart from Marianne de Trey, he has been the potter most intimately connected with the crafts community there, working at Dartington for nearly fifty years.


Images courtesy of Nic Johnson


Tuesday, 16 November 2010


The Early Years

Willi Soukop
Dartington, 1934-40
"My life was never planned, it just happened,"

Swan Fountain, 1950, Dartington Hall Gardens

The Donkey, Dartington Hall Gardens

Soukop's Studio, Dartington Hall Gardens


"My work is rather catholic,and ranges over a wide variety of subject-matter as well as materials - my art education was traditional but my chief influence was the German sculptor Ernst Barlach (1870-1938) and travelling and meeting the other artists who widened my horizons, in particular through teaching in England."


Viennese sculptor Willi Soukop came to Dartington in 1934. Dartington was a virtual international centre for the arts and this had a tremendous effect on Soukop, and its influence on him lasted decades, with the friendships formed enduring to his death. He wasn't the only European exile to come to Dartington, the entire Jooss Ballet from Germany,Michael Chekhov and his drama school and Hein Heckroth, who went on to win an Oscar for his set designs for 'The Red Shoes' were all there.

Other influences on Soukop came from friendships with the artists Cecil Collins and the potters Bernard and David Leach.

For Soukop, Dartington became an idyllic haven where he was not only free to carve but was also offered a teaching post, at Dartington Hall School. With war approaching, he had no wish to return to Vienna, but in 1940 he, like many others, was classified as an "alien" and first interned at Aintree racecourse, then shipped off to Canada for nine months until he was released to return to Dartington. He went on to set up sculpture departments at Blundell's School, Bryanston School, in Dorset, and then the Downs School in Worcestershire.

In 1945 Soukop came to London and taught at Bromley, Guildford and Chelsea Schools of Art - where he remained until 1972. In 1969 he accepted the additional position of Master of Sculpture at the Royal Academy Schools and became a member of the faculty for the British School in Rome.


Bernard Leach Exhibition

Leach Pottery, St Ives




Current Exhibition

July 10th to end of year

THE DARTINGTON YEARS


Between 1925 and 1946 the Leach Pottery in St Ives was deeply intertwined, philosophically and financially, with the Dartington Hall community in South Devon. This exhibition looks at the role played by the Elmhirsts of Dartington in the early development of the Leach Pottery and introduces a part of their fine collection of pottery, gathered under the guidance of Bernard Leach and currently held at High Cross House on the Dartington Estate in Totnes, Devon.


http://www.leachpottery.com/exhibitions.html