Thomas Percy Sanders was born on the 16th of February 1924. Others record his birth in 1921 or 1925, but it was actually 1924. After serving in the Royal Australian Air Force as an Aircraftsman in WW2, Tom moved north from Melbourne and started working in Guy Boyd's Sydney pottery as a potter and ceramic decorator. He moved back to Melbourne in 1949 and worked at the Hoffmann pottery in East Brunswick. He spent a year with Arthur Boyd at Murrumbeena in suburban Melbourne before setting up his own pottery "T & E Sanders" at Eltham in 1950. Following the establishment of Montsalvat in 1934, Eltham was becoming a centre for what was later to be called the alternative lifestyle. He produced this piece decorated in pseudo-aboriginal art style using the name "Dorian Sands", incised to the base. His work is said to have been influenced by Guy Boyd and John Perceval. I tend to think that his skill as a potter and artist probably influenced them. Tom was part of that talented group of artists who moved to London in the late 1950s eg: Sydney Nolan, Arthur Boyd, Charles Blackman Brett Whitely and Barry Humphries. There is an advertisement for his ramekins in South Australia in 1950. In 1964, a black and white 16mm film entitled “The Lively Arts” featured Tom. Using his pseudonym Dorian Sands, he also produced a series of sgraffito decorated zodiac inspired ramekins. They can be costly so if you find one, buy it.
What does he mean by “cut down again by the art world which had exiled him some ten years before?” Probably referring to the emerging underground scene of the time that rejected those artists of the previous generation that had moved from radical to established; a curious thing that happens every thirty years or so.
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