Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
Incised
“Isobel Australia Hand Made”
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Hand thrown gloss glazed two-coloured glaze to
half of body. Straight, angled sides to raised foot ring. Squared tab handle with dimpled top
attached to upper third of exterior
|
Condition
|
Mostly very
good. Some small chips to base
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
108mm
|
Width at Base
|
73mm
|
Depth
|
53mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
130mm
|
Weight
|
180gm
|
Volume
|
250ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
Salvo Stores,
Brandon Park
30th
January 2015.
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 001-116
|
Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
No marks on
one but stamped “Isobel Australia” on others
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Hand thrown gloss glazed white coloured glaze to
interior of body and foot ring, Harlequin pastels to exterior. Straight,
angled sides to raised foot ring.
Pointed tab handle with dimpled top attached to upper third of
exterior
|
Condition
|
Mostly very
good. Some small chips to base
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
108mm
|
Width at Base
|
73mm
|
Depth
|
46mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
140mm
|
Weight
|
200gm
|
Volume
|
235ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 017-020
|
Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
Incised
“Isobel” to base
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Hand thrown gloss glazed harlequin coloured glaze
to interior and exterior of body with unglazed foot ring, Harlequin pastels
to exterior. Curved, angled sides to raised foot ring. Pointed tab handle with dimpled top
attached to upper third of exterior
|
Condition
|
Mostly very
good. Some small chips to base and
rim
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
55mm
|
Width at Base
|
47mm
|
Depth
|
46mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
125mm
|
Weight
|
100gm
|
Volume
|
180ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 021-025
|
Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
Painted
“Isobel Aust”in black to base
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Mould formed matte glazed brown overglaze to
interior and exterior of body, Harlequin pastels to exterior. Large curved,
sides to raised foot ring. Pointed
tab handle with dimpled top attached to upper third of exterior.
|
Condition
|
Mostly very
good. Some small bubbles in glaze to
base. Run in glaze to each side.
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
125mm
|
Width at Base
|
52mm
|
Depth
|
53mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
169mm
|
Weight
|
330gm
|
Volume
|
480ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 026
|
Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
Painted
“Isobel Aust”in black to base
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Mould formed matte glazed brown overglaze to
interior and exterior of body, Harlequin pastels to exterior. Large curved,
sides to raised foot ring. Pointed
tab handle with dimpled top attached to upper third of exterior. Stencilled leaf pattern in pale brown to
bottom of bowl interior
|
Condition
|
Mostly very
good. Spur marks to base.
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
125mm
|
Width at Base
|
52mm
|
Depth
|
40mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
169mm
|
Weight
|
245gm
|
Volume
|
300ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 027-129
|
Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
Painted
“Isobel Aust”in black to base
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Mould formed matte glazed brown overglaze to
interior and exterior of body, Harlequin pastels to exterior. Large curved,
sides to raised foot ring. Pointed
tab handle with dimpled top attached to upper third of exterior. Stencilled leaf pattern in pale blue to
bottom of bowl interior
|
Condition
|
Mostly very
good. Spur marks to base.
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
125mm
|
Width at Base
|
52mm
|
Depth
|
40mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
169mm
|
Weight
|
245gm
|
Volume
|
300ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 030-034
|
Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
incised
“Isobel Aust” to base
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Mould formed matte glazed black overglaze to
interior and exterior of body. Large curved, sides to raised foot ring. Pointed tab handle with dimpled top
attached to upper third of exterior.
Stencilled leaf pattern in pale blue to bottom of bowl interior
|
Condition
|
Very
good.
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
125mm
|
Width at Base
|
52mm
|
Depth
|
40mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
169mm
|
Weight
|
245gm
|
Volume
|
300ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 031-032
|
Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
Painted
“Isobel Aust” in black to base
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Mould formed white gloss glazed green overglaze
to rim and top two thirds of exterior of body. Large curved, sides to raised
foot ring. Pointed tab handle with
dimpled top attached to upper third of exterior. Painted mushrooms in green and brown to bottom of bowl interior
|
Condition
|
Very
good.
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
125mm
|
Width at Base
|
52mm
|
Depth
|
40mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
169mm
|
Weight
|
245gm
|
Volume
|
300ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 033
|
Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
Painted
“Isobel Aust” in black to base
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Mould formed white gloss glazed brown swirled
overglaze to rim and exterior of body. Harlequin interior. Large curved, sides to raised foot ring. Pointed tab handle with dimpled top
attached to upper third of exterior.
|
Condition
|
Very
good.
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
115mm
|
Width at Base
|
67mm
|
Depth
|
48mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
160mm
|
Weight
|
225gm
|
Volume
|
325ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 034-036
|
Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
Incised
“Isobel Aust” to base
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Mould formed pale green gloss exterior. Interior pink with floral pattern hand
painted by Helen Ilich. Harlequin interior.
Curved, sides to raised foot ring.
Long pointedknife shaped handle with dimpled top attached to upper
third of exterior.
|
Condition
|
Very
good.
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
120mm
|
Width at Base
|
60mm
|
Depth
|
42mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
177mm
|
Weight
|
230gm
|
Volume
|
270ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 037-039
|
Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
Incised
“Isobel” to base
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Mould formed pale pink gloss exterior. Interior blue. Curved, sides to raised foot ring. Pointed tab handle with dimpled top attached to upper third of
exterior.
|
Condition
|
Very
good.
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
118mm
|
Width at Base
|
60mm
|
Depth
|
50mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
158mm
|
Weight
|
215gm
|
Volume
|
320ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 040
|
Designer
|
Isobel
|
Maker
|
Isobel
|
Marks
|
Painted
“Isobel Australia by Helen” to base
|
Material
|
Glazed slip
|
Description
|
Mould formed cream gloss exterior with green
edging on rim and handle. Interior
cream with painted pea pod design by Helen Ilich. Straight, sides angled down to raised unglazed foot ring. Squared tab handle with dimpled top
attached to upper third of exterior.
|
Condition
|
Very
good.
|
Number
|
No number
|
Production
Date
|
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
118mm
|
Width at Base
|
80mm
|
Depth
|
46mm
|
Length (with
handle)
|
134mm
|
Weight
|
220gm
|
Volume
|
250ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
ISO 041
|
Isobel produced around a dozen
different ramekins over the relatively short life of the pottery. There were only a few different shapes but
each was decorated differently. There
appears to have only been two different handle shapes, either a pointed tab or
squared tab handle, no matter the size or shape of the bowl.
Standard reference on pottery
marks (Ford) refers to Hilda Ilich as being Isobel. I
think he may be incorrect on this one. Helen Ilich, Painter
and Ceramic Artist was born in Croatia in 1914, migrated to Australia 1950 is
considered by many to be Isobel but I think they are wrong on this.
Isobel probably refers to Isobel Joy Fraser who ran the show
but I have no confirmation or information on this. I got that information second-hand and cannot
find any reference to any such person.
I believe that both Helen and Isobel may have worked together at Boyds.
These ramekins were made by "Isobel Art Pottery" on
the Maroondah Highway in Croydon, Victoria, now an outer suburb of Melbourne.
Little information is available on her or her work other than her working
with Guy Boyd in Bentleigh before moving to Croydon where she worked in her
normally one-person operation in a shed at the back of a shop.
Many of her ramekins are incised
"Isobel" to the base or stamped.
The shape and style are like those of Guy Boyd and Ray Cook, perhaps an
early work copying their Bentleigh studio. Copyright was a little more
flexible in those days. Described as
"Hand Made", some of her ramekins were thrown with the chocolate
brown colour mixed into the clay and a light glaze applied to the
interior. Some ramekins are not
stamped, or maybe it wore off from use.
Helen Ilich, Painter and Ceramic
Artist was born in Croatia in 1914, migrated to Australia 1950. She worked at
Ellis' in 1955, then Guy Boyd’s pottery, Crosbie Road, East Bentleigh. She left
Boyds around 1960 to work at Isobel. She stopped at Isobel after 2 years to
return to Ellis. Helen then taught painting to women from a studio in her
home. She continued painting into the mid 1990s and
died in 2002. She started by underglaze
painting some of her work with her name "H.Ilich", on some of
"Isobel"s output, this is where the confusion arises.
Little information is available
on her or her work other than her working with Guy Boyd in Bentleigh before
moving to Croydon where she worked mainly as a one-person operation in a shed
at the back of a shop. Any other information would be appreciated.
For those who may be interested,
here is a more fulsome story of Helen;
Jellina (Helen) Ilic (nee Popovic) (1914-2001) was a Serbian, born in
the town of Osijec, Yugoslavia (now Croatia) on 19 February 1914. She was
taught art by a Russian immigrant who lived in the area and hoped to attend art
school in Vienna.
However her father resisted the
idea and instead encouraged her to marry, which she did in 1934, marrying
Bozidar Ilic (born in 1908), a Serbian from a poor family. He had hoped to
study, but instead joined the army. Helen continued to paint at home until the birth
of her son Vojislau in 1937. She also had a daughter, Nina, who was born in
1934.
During World War Two Bozidar was captured by invading Italians and held
captive for several years. Upon his release he walked to Switzerland and
enrolled in an architecture course for six years. During this time Helen worked
as a high school art teacher in Yugoslavia.
In 1950 Bozidar immigrated to Melbourne and was initially employed
dredging the docks. However around 1953 he gained employment as an architect
with the Public Works department. The same year he arranged for his family to
migrate to Australia with the assistance of the Red Cross. Helen and the
children travelled on the SS Oceania (via Trieste - Genoa - Naples –
Messira - Suez - Port Said - Aiden - Colombo – Fremantle) in the lower berths,
which let in water when the seas were rough. Despite this discomfort Nina
recalls enjoying the journey. Helen brought three to four crates with her, one
of which held selected special paintings - a portrait of her grandmother, a
landscape and a still life.
When his family arrived Bozidar bought a house at 75 Highett Street in
Richmond - he had previously been living in Spring Street - and the family were
sent out to work. From Highett Street,
Bodizar could walk to work. Helen
worked as a Kindergarten Assistant, she is listed on the Electoral Roll as a
Teacher. Nina worked with a dressmaker
and Vojislau worked on building sites. Nina and Vojislau did eventually attend
school, MacRobertson and RMIT respectively.
Vojislau becoming an Engineer,
Around 1955, Helen joined the Ellis ceramic studio in Fitzroy, which had
been established by two Czechoslovakian immigrants, Dagmar and Miloslav
Kratochvil, in the mid 1950s. Helen did decorative features on pots and vases
(etching) before firing. This was paid piece work rates and she left the studio
due to the dusty conditions.
She then joined Guy Boyd’s studio in East Bentleigh in 1956 or 1957 and
was employed doing decorative paintings on the ceramics, according to Boyd’s
directions. Boyd also encouraged Helen to do souvenir brooches, which she
particularly enjoyed. Guy Boyd Pottery produced a wide range of modernist
objects from house-wares to decorative pieces, featuring iconic Australian
imagery, particularly flora and indigenous motifs.
Helen remained at Boyd's for two to three years, but left at the request
of her husband. She then went to work with Isobel, who had worked with her at
Boyd's, but had left to start her own studio in a backyard shed in Oakleigh.
The conditions were basic and the travel times long. Helen worked with Isobel for about two years and also worked
part-time at Ellis, as they had requested her return.
In 1959 Helen and her family moved from Richmond to 36 The Righi,
Ivanhoe, where she set up a studio in her home, teaching women oil painting,
Bozidar was still working for the Public Service. In the late 1960s
she joined the Heidelberg District Artists' Society and
exhibited in Heidelberg, in Fitzroy during Moomba and at the Camberwell Town
Hall. She sold a small amount of work and continued teaching throughout the
1960s, but eventually stopped due to her husband's complaints about the smell,
but recommenced after his death in 1992. She continued painting until
about six years before her own death on 18 February 2002.
Helen generally painted in oils on board and canvas as she found water
colours difficult. Her style was naturalistic and landscapes were her favourite
subjects, although without a car she struggled to undertake “en plein air”
paintings. The inspiration for her landscapes largely came from a folio she
created of magazine clippings, catalogues and friends' photos of the Australian
Outback and other locations, as the furthest she traveled after her arrival in
Melbourne was to Magnetic Island, off the coast at Townsville, Queensland. Because of her increasingly limited
mobility, she did do still life work and some portraits, as she found the
subjects more manageable.
Helen admired Australian artists such as Hans Heysen,
Russell Drysdale, Arthur Streeton, Fredrick McCubbin, and also appreciated
Aboriginal art. She loved Australia and its landscape particularly, wattles,
evergreen trees, gum trees with their stripping bark, sheep and horses (she
rode as a child), the sky, the climate and the light. Despite facing
difficulties in her struggle to become an artist, including family opposition
and domestic isolation, Helen persevered through the imagery provided by
friend's travel photos, clippings from magazines and calendars and her own
immediate environment.
Some of these ramekins show examples of her work, there
are sprigs of wattle and other Australian wild flowers painted inside the
bowls, as well as one with mushrooms and another with just a couple of leaves.