Designer
|
Harold Hughan
|
Maker
|
Harold Hughan
|
Marks
|
Painted H Hughan faintly to base in oxide and incised
H G
I
|
Material
|
Glazed earthenware clay
|
Description
|
Shallow bowl with small curved
handle. Glazed in brown “avocado”
finish. Unglazed footring.
|
Condition
|
Very good
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production Date
|
After 1945
|
Width at rim
|
110mm
|
Width at Base
|
55mm
|
Depth
|
35mm
|
Length (with handle)
|
150mm
|
Weight
|
230gm
|
Volume
|
240ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
Australian Pottery at Bemboka
25 October 2013
|
Rameking Reference Number
|
HUG 001
|
Harold Randolph Hughan (1893-1987), potter was born on 11 July 1893 at
Mildura, Victoria, the second of ten children of Victorian born Randolph
Hughan, Gardener, and his English-born wife Emily, née Clayton. Of slight
build, and known to close friends simply as `Buzz’, Hughan was described by
Kenneth Hood, who had championed his work, as being, like his pots, `reserved
and unassuming’. Much of Harold’s
childhood was spent at Hamilton, Victoria.
In 1910 he moved to Geelong and retrained, by correspondence, as an
Electrical Engineer, hence the nickname “Buzz”.
Having previously served in the Militia for some years, on 27
October 1915 Hughan enlisted in the 1st Australian Imperial
Force. He saw action on the Western Front in 1916-18 with the 3rd Divisional
Signal Company and the 44th Battalion.
In November 1917 Sergeant Hughan was commissioned and in March 1918
promoted to Lieutenant. On the 2nd of September 1919 he married Lily
Booth at the parish church of St James, Toxteth Park, Liverpool, England. They arrived in Melbourne in February 1920
and his AIF appointment terminated on 14 April. He continued to serve in the
Militia, rising to Major in the Volunteer Defence Corps (Home Guard) during
World War II.
Born in 1893 he was of an older
generation, but as he didn't take up pottery until 1940 he is situated firmly
in the post-war pottery movement. The
beginning of his interest in ceramics coincides neatly with the publication of A Potter's Book, which
he first read in 1940, the year it was published. After
several jobs, Hughan moved to Melbourne and joined the firm of Oliver J.
Nilsen, for whom he worked as an electrical engineer until his retirement in
1963. Long interested in crafts, including woodwork and weaving, he was introduced
to pottery in the early 1940s by his wife and their son, Robert, who had taken
it up as a hobby.
Bernard Leach’s A
Potter’s Book (1940)
attracted him to studio pottery in the Anglo-Japanese tradition; C. F. Binns’s The Potter’s Craft(1910) taught
him to throw pots on a wheel he devised from the crankshaft of a motorcar
engine. He soon built his own kiln and made stoneware in a workshop behind his
Glen Iris home. He made his own kick-wheel
and started using feldspar and iron oxide to create celadon and tenmoku glazes
with occasional use of dolomite for special effects. His research into stoneware bodies and glazes was aided by Robert
who was a ceramic technologist with the CSIRO.
He was strongly influenced by Bernard Leach, teaching
himself to throw with the book propped up in front of him so that he could
follow the illustrations.
In 1950 Hughan would contribute a
chapter to Australian ceramic history by staging the first major exhibition of
stoneware ceramics at the Georges department store gallery in Melbourne. His
first retrospective exhibition was held in 1968 at the National Gallery of
Victoria and a second exhibition (an exceptional honour) was held at the
gallery in 1983 to commemorate his ninetieth birthday. In the catalogue
accompanying this second exhibition, the then Director of the gallery, Patrick
McCaughey, wrote that 'More than any other Australian ceramist Harold Hughan
has been able to absorb the feel and colour of that landscape into his own
practice and so returned something authentically and familiarly Australian to
us.
With the greatest of goodwill, it
is hard to see how this was the case.
Rather than making identifiably Australian pottery, Hughan actually
worked in what was a powerful global style, that of Anglo-Oriental ceramics. One couldn't tell whether a faceted celadon
glazed jar was made in Melbourne or London, and even when Hughan produced a
magnificent late series of temmoku glazed platters with decorations based on
Australian wildflowers, the actual origin of the flora was not at all apparent,
buried as they were in a calligraphic cipher of brown on black.
These were international pots
made in response to Leach's philosophy of a timeless standard in ceramics and
the primacy of traditional Oriental techniques and they were made in Australia
just as they were made everywhere A Potter's Book was
read. The Powerhouse Museum has a
potters wheel designed and made by Harold) in about 1941. This is probably the
first potters wheel to be made in Australia for use in studio pottery.
Hughan drew inspiration from the Herbert Kent collection of Chinese ceramics at the
National Gallery of Victoria: his great love was the pots of the Song and T’ang
Dynasties, but his interests encompassed many aspects of historic and
contemporary practice. Seeking an `Australian idiom’, he also experimented with
new forms. It was important to him that his pots were domestic, functional and affordable;
yet they were also distinguished by subtle shapes and beautiful glazes,
particularly the Orient-inspired celadons and tenmokus.
He gained a devoted following, especially for his large platters,
decorated with oriental motifs, native iris or sprays of bamboo. While
prolific, he worked at his own pace well into his nineties. `I do not make
pottery for a living’, he said in 1984, `it [is] purely for pleasure, and
always has been’.
An exhibition of Hughan’s work at Georges Gallery, Melbourne, in 1950,
led to his becoming one of the first contemporary studio potters to be
represented in the National Gallery of Victoria. Later exhibitions included
major retrospectives at the NGV (1969, 1983).
His work has also been collected by the National Gallery of Australia;
most Australian State and regional galleries and by the Victoria and Albert
Museum, London. A member of the Arts
and Crafts Society of Victoria since 1949, he was invited in 1970 to be the
patron of the Victorian Ceramic Group, which established an award in his name.
In 1978 he was appointed MBE.
He started potting full-time
on his retirement in 1963 and remained a most significant and influential
figure until his death in 1987. The National Gallery of Victoria showed a
retrospective exhibition (with catalogue) in 1969, and another on the occasion
of his 90th birthday in 1983, when Craft Australia published a special
supplement. He continued making pots
into his nineties, dying in 1987 at the age of 94. His early works are marked H
GI (for Glen Iris) in oxide. Works from 1945 are marked with an impressed H GI
and may also be signed in oxide.
Predeceased by his wife (1966), and survived by his son, he died at
Prahran, Melbourne, on 23 October 1987, and was buried in Springvale
cemetery. In
1978 he was awarded the MBE for his services to pottery. In the 1940s, potters wheels would have been
imported, but as an engineer, he had the ability to design and make his own. He
was assisted in the building of kilns and development of clays by his son Robert
(Bob) Hughan (b. 1925)
Sources
http://www.powerhousemuseum.com/collection/database/?irn=150295#ixzz2ip2rqVBC
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution
Non-Commercial
I am Harold's grandson. I have one correction to make. The nickname 'Buzz' had nothing to do with him being an electrical engineer--ha ha!. It was actually down to a younger brother being unable to say 'brother' properly, and calling him his 'big buzzer'.
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