Designer
|
Gus
McLaren
|
Maker
|
Gus
McLaren
|
Marks
|
Signature
“Gus McLaren” painted in black to base
|
Material
|
Glazed
earthenware
|
Description
|
Wheel thrown recurved bowl with open-ended
knob handle. Unglazed flat base with
circular pattern from wire cutting.
Matte glaze to exterior with magnesium oxide flecks. Gloss glaze to interior.
|
Condition
|
Very good
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production Date
|
Early
1970s
|
Width at rim
|
80mm
|
Width at Base
|
127mm
|
Depth
|
78mm
|
Length (with handle)
|
187mm
|
Weight
|
420gm
|
Volume
|
700ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
Waverley
Antiques Market
4th
Oct 2013
|
Rameking Reference Number
|
GML
001-008
|
I have compiled the following
from anything I could find on the web about Gus. Much comes from the McLaren Pottery website, Australian Pottery
at Bemboka and several other sources.
There is a lot to get through, so please be patient.
William George (Gus) McLaren was born in Melbourne on the 7th of
November 1923 to William and Beryl, Gus became a celebrated
Australian artist, animator and
potter. He studies cartooning
part-time two nights a week for a year
at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT). His artistic abilities became focuses during
his service in the Australian army during World War 2. He enlisted in Western
Australia on the 7th January 1942 and he later served in the
pacific. He painted panels for a
recreation tent for wounded Australian and allied soldiers. This work now resides at the Australian War
Memorial in Canberra.
In 1946 as part of the British
Commonwealth Occupation forces Press Unit, Gus traveled to Japan to teach art
to the Japanese and there he met and was interviewed by a young cartoonist,
named Les Tanner, who also worked for BECON (a British and Allied Forces
Newspaper). They produced cartoons for
the newspaper they were attached to.
Later Les would become a nationally published political cartoonist. By early 1947 BCOF
had begun to decline and, by the end of 1948, was composed entirely of
Australians. The force was dismantled in 1951, when the Japanese Peace Treaty
came into effect.
After Gus’ discharge on the 2nd
of February 1949, the friendship endured for over the next fifty years, until
Les Tanner's death in 2001. After the
war, Gus moved to Sydney where he worked as a cartoonist and illustrator for the
Daily Telegraph and Women's Weekly before moving home to Melbourne where he
worked on The Argus newspaper,
as the cartoonist "Just Gus" in 1954/55. When the Argus closed, he read a review left on a desk on a book
on pottery. He found and read the book and
began his career by making chess pieces from local clay. He claims never to have finished it, but he
later displayed a chess set at the Australian Gallery. He later sold a chess set for 50
guineas ($105.00).
His signed cartoon of four
soldiers playing poker with one taking the pot and saying “Well! Well! Ten
o’clock, lights out you know”, 1950, brush and ink and blue pencil, 20.5 × 26.3
cm (AWM),
is the original for the gag published in the last of the Australian War
Memorial’s 19 illustrated Christmas books, As you were (1950). “Gus” also signed a not very
good woman driver joke in Melbourne Argus 1956: “The roundabouts confuse me so I
always get through them as quickly as possible”.
In the early 1950s, Gus and Elizabeth (Betty) moved to Warrandyte, an outer area of Melbourne popular at the time because of
the low cost of land, with artists and potters. Later (in 1955), he began potting with Reg Preston and was one of
the founding members in 1958 of the Potters Cottage at Warrandyte in
Victoria. Reg fired Gus’ chess
pieces. (See my post on Reg Preson for
more details on them.) Reg and his wife
Phyll Dunn (see my post) remained friends until their deaths. They even moved in and shared a house with
the Prestons for a time.
He and Betty were among the founders of the Warrandyte's
Potters Cottage, and as his technique developed, he moved into stoneware
ceramics and more sculptural projects. He went on to have regular exhibitions
in Melbourne and his work was exhibited at the National Gallery of Victoria, the
Art Gallery of Western Australia, the Tasmanian Art Gallery, Shepparton
Regional Art Gallery, University of Queensland and with many private
collections in Australia and overseas.
While he concentrated on producing and exhibiting
"one-off" pieces of pottery from the 1950s through the '80s, Betty
carried on exclusively with the Yarra Ridge Pottery business. Through all these
years McLaren also dug clay from the Bradley's Lane site, made mud-earth
bricks, and built the family home — always building extensions, always without
planning permission. All this was paid
for by his work as a cartoonist.
He was also the main innovator in setting up Potters
Restaurant, and later The Hot Pot Shop in South Melbourne, specialising in
"peasant" provincial casseroles served in rugged stoneware plates
that were enthusiastically souvenired. These eateries were highly successful,
but he sold out once the innovative appeal had worn off.
Eventually “Potters Cottage” expanded to encompass a gallery, a
flourishing pottery school, and finally a very successful and well known
restaurant, “Potters Restaurant” (which Gus was very much involved in the
setting up). He was also one of the principle teachers at the Potters School.
Gus and Reg began making pottery
together using the name “Regus” (Reg & Gus). Reg taught betty slipcasting and the team expanded. Gus and Betty then set up Yarraridge pottery
and together and separately, the two produced an extensive body of work. This
included wheel-thrown and hand-built pieces, as well as a range of slip-cast
figures designed by Gus and decorated by Betty. These designs are still being
used by Betty to make figures for sale from her McLarren Pottery on the New South Wales south coast.
Later they moved to their own
place in Bradley’s Lane Warrandyte, but continued working at Reg’s pottery
until he finished building their own studio.
The house was designed by Architect John Hipwell, another member of
Potters Cottage. In between his other
work, Gus made mud bricks to enlarge the home and studio without recourse to
permits . They first moved into a shed
which later became the studio. He
exchanged, at modest prices, his work with friends such as John Percival, Gareth
Jones-Roberts, Arthur Boyd, and fellow potters. In the 1970s, he and Betty built
a "Warrandyte" home at Merimbula, where she moved and began potting
during a long separation.
Once in their studio named “Yarra
Ridge Pottery” they started producing animals, designed by Gus and slipcast by
Betty”. During this period, Les Tanner worked on a collaborative
project with the McLarens producing a satirical swipe at the establishment of
the day, in the form of ceramic jugs, designed by Les and slipcast by Betty
of Sir Henry Bolte, Premier of Victoria
in the 1950 to 1970s They also made a
Sir Robert Menzies jug. (Bob Menzies is
still Australia’s longest serving Prime Minister.
In 1962, McLaren became the
author of Australia's first animated TV cartoon, at Channel Nine. A
trailblazer, he was the co-writer, animator, artist and director of Freddo
the Frog for Fanfare Films. He then worked with Hanna
Barbera on Scooby Doo, and on the animated feature
film Grendel
Grendel Grendel, with Peter Ustinov.
Gus began working full-time on
animation in the 1970s. He worked on
television commercials, animated feature films including a long stretch with
Hannah Barbera. Gus created the
character “Freddo Frog” for MacRobertson Chocolates, now owned by Cadbury
Schweppes. Betty kept the pottery
business going while Gus was otherwise occupied, but he would come back for
short periods. Over time, Betty took over operation of the slip
casting and decorating process, as well as working on her own hand-painted
pieces, supplying the Potters Cottage and other galleries in Victoria.
He became interested in stoneware and built a gas-fired
kiln. (Stoneware is fired at a higher
temperature than earthenware.) This
work was becoming increasingly abstract, being less decorative and more
sculptural in form using matte ash glaze.
His surfaces were becoming more rugged and textural and his life-long
love of Science Fiction was seemingly reflected in the wonderful and fantastic
shapes of his ceramic sculptures.
He continued a successful career as a potter and went on to have
regular exhibitions in Melbourne and has pieces exhibited in the National
Gallery of Victoria. Gus’s work has been represented in the Art Gallery of
Western Australia, Tasmanian Art Gallery, Shepparton Regional Art Gallery,
University of Queensland and many private collections both in Australia and
overseas.
Whilst Gus concentrated producing and exhibiting “one-off” pieces of
pottery (and during the periods of his animation) which includes the period
from the ‘50’s,’60’s, 70, and 80’s, Betty, carried on exclusively with the
Yarraridge Pottery business., producing the animals, decorating and firing
pieces (designed by Gus in the ‘50’s/’60’s) such as bulls, horses, lions cats
etc. whilst also working on her own designs supplying Potters Cottage and other
galleries mainly in Victoria.
In the early 70s’s Gus and Betty purchased land in Merimbula, New South
Wales and over the next few years Gus built the house, (where she currently
lives). In the early eighties Betty trained their daughter Kirsty McLaren to
continue the business of producing the animals in their Warrandyte studio, she
ran the business for a couple of years before leaving for London in the
mid-eighties to become a photographer where she currently still lives.. Their
eldest daughter, Susan, after an early career in fashion modeling, after living in Europe, and is following the family tradition, and has become a
ceramic artist, producing highly colourful mosaic designs and ceramic
sculptures. Susan now works at the studio in Merimbula helping Beth with producing Gus' designs. She has two children Ella and Zac, and is now a grandmother to two
young boys Oliver and Luca.
The boys, John, headed north to Merimbula, he took after his father in
his love of creative stone-walls and landscape gardening, while youngest Tim,
has settled in Melbourne with his wife Janine, and son, Liam and divides his
time between his passion as a jazz musician [guitarist] and computer
programming.
In the early 80s, after a short break, Betty began working again in her
new studio in Merimbula and resumed the full and exclusive productions of the
animals as well as other work that she produces and designs, continuing to
supply Potters Cottage in Warrandyte (as before) right up until its recent
close. Betty, now in her 80’s still continues to supply local galleries, as
well as galleries far afield, the unique McLaren Pottery animals, which had
it’s origins in the 1950’s right through to the present day.
After Betty moved to Merimbula, NSW,
daughter Kirsty ran the pottery at Warrandyte. After Kirsty left for London in
the mid-1980s, Betty moved production to Merimbula where she is still producing
slip cast animals to Gus's original 1950s and 1960s designs under the name McLaren Pottery. Betty's works
are signed 'B Mclaren' or 'Betty McLaren'. McLaren Pottery works are signed
'MCL' or 'McLaren'. Gus’s ceramic work is signed 'Gus McLaren'.
Gus has ceramic works in both
public and private collections. When the Potters Cottage held its 45th
anniversary in 2003, he participated in the exhibition. He also has a considerable body of work in
animated films. In 1962 he directed the first animation series made for
Australian television, Freddo the Frog and
he was one of the animators who worked on Grendel, Grendel, Grendel, a
full-length animated film retelling the Beowulf epic released in 1981.
When
Betty moved to Merimbula in the early 1980s, Gus remained in Melbourne, but
returned to live with his family in West Richmond before his death in
2008. Early in 2008, Gus asked
his daughters to take him back to Merimbula, where he lived with his
family. Gus died of pneumonia and heart
failure on the 29th of August 2008 at Pambula Hospital in New South
Wales. He was 84.
He enjoyed his morning coffee
with The
Age
and he was buried with a copy of the newspaper on the Merimbula
waterfront, enthusiastically telling visitors of his pleasure in the town, and
in again being with his children Susan, Kirsty, John and Tim, and Betty, who
survive him. Betty, a living national treasure is now 86 and the last of the original Potters Cottage group. She is still working at Merimbula with the help of daughter Susan.
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