Below right - back cover
Following my total rave about this title the other day I am now posting more detailed information taken largely from the book itself.
Potter extraordinaire,
conservationist, railway enthusiast and iconoclast Barry Brickell is one of New
Zealand’s most important ceramicists. His exuberant and elemental pots and
sculptures pulse with a humour and sexuality rare in New Zealand craft or art.
One of the leaders of the New Zealand Anglo-Oriental pottery movement that
developed from the 1950s, Brickell has shaped both his own characterful
domestic ware and ‘erectures’ and the wider pottery culture for more than fifty
years. And as his reputation as potter and kiln-master grew, so too did his homegrown
narrow-gauge railway at Driving Creek in the Coromandel, which with its
sculpted hillsides and human detritus, remains his largest and most powerful
work.
In essays by David
Craig and Gregory O’Brien and with both newly commissioned photographs by Haru
Sameshima and historic images, His Own Steam: The Work of Barry Brickell
charts Brickell’s work in the context of his life and times. Texts by David
Craig sketch out Brickell’s history and career, then take us through crucial
themes, preoccupations and forms in his work, from sustaining domestic ware to
the influences of the medieval grotesque and Pacific motifs; from realistic
murals to bodily ‘morphs’. Brickell’s ideas about energy and engineering, the
body and conservation all collide in his clay work; his well-known
‘spiromorphs’, for example – large-scale spiral creations built from coiled
clay – twist and unfold in curves that parallel the spirals of his railway.
The natural and built landscape at
Driving Creek has also been crucial for Brickell’s work, as Gregory O’Brien
then examines in his tour of Brickell’s fellows, influences and milieu. Artists
and craftspeople from Deirdre Airey to Tony Fomison, Nigel Brown to Fatu Feu‘u,
Michael Illingworth to Peter Lange all washed up at the Creek; and Brickell’s
own journeys took him visiting others, including Yvonne Rust, Toss Woollaston
and Ralph Hotere. The book concludes with a comprehensive chronology that
further illuminates the ‘animated and vernacular’ achievements – created on his
own terms and under his own steam – by this unique New Zealand thinker and
craftsman.
DAVID CRAIG, a sociologist and
associate professor at University of Otago, has written and researched on
society, politics and culture in a wide range of contexts over three decades.
Craig is the editor of Barry Brickell: Doggerel (2012), a
collection of Brickell’s poems and aphorisms, and co-curator, with Emma Bugden,
of the 2013 Barry Brickell retrospective at The Dowse Art Museum.
GREGORY O’BRIEN is a
writer, curator and painter whose most recent art projects are the books Hanly
(2012), A Micronaut in the Wide World (2011) and Euan Macleod (2010),
as well as a catalogue for the touring exhibition Kermadec. In 2012 he
was made an Arts Foundation Laureate and received
the Prime Minister’s Award for Literary Achievement in non-fiction.
HARUHIKO SAMESHIMA is a photographer, artist, image editor, teacher and
publisher. His recent publishing projects include Thinking it Through: Tony
Watkins (2012) and Bold Centuries: A Photographic History Album
(2009). He was the principal photographer and image editor for Cone Ten
Down: Studio Pottery in New Zealand 1945–1980 (2008) and The
Passing World, The Passage of Life: John Hovell and the Art of Kōwhaiwhai (2010).
His Own Steam: The
Work of Barry Brickell
also includes a foreword by writer, curator, arts consultant and cultural
commentator HAMISH KEITH, a friend of Brickell’s for more than fifty years, and
is published in conjunction with His Own Steam: A Barry Brickell Survey,
curated by Emma Bugden and David Craig for The Dowse Art Museum, Lower Hutt,
then touring nationally 2013–2015.
A photo of Barry c.1970's on page 139 of the book - taken by Marti Friedlander
The book is profusely and gorgeously illustrated with contemporary photographs by Haruhiko Sameshima and earlier photographs by Gil Hanly, Marti Friedlander, Steve Rumsey, Robin Morrison and others. It is a book of great beauty.
A photo of Barry c.1970's on page 139 of the book - taken by Marti Friedlander
The book is profusely and gorgeously illustrated with contemporary photographs by Haruhiko Sameshima and earlier photographs by Gil Hanly, Marti Friedlander, Steve Rumsey, Robin Morrison and others. It is a book of great beauty.
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