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The Ceramic Art of James Tower

By (author) Timothy Wilcox
Foreword by Antony Gormley
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd, London, United Kingdom
Published: 25th Apr 2012
Dimensions: w 251mm h 300mm d 22mm
Weight: 1295g
ISBN-10: 1848220707
ISBN-13: 9781848220706
Barcode No: 9781848220706
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Synopsis
'James Tower was a unique figure in post-war British sculpture and this is the monograph that we have been eagerly awaiting. It presents his achievements with real conviction and will introduce him to the much larger world that his oeuvre demands'. (Edmund de Waal) 'I think of James as a quintessentially English artist, who responded to his environment, was dedicated to his craft and who was a true friend. His works outlive him and for me represent the very best of English studio ceramics.' (Antony Gormley in his Foreword) James Tower (1919 - 1988) is widely regarded as one of the most distinctive figures in post-war British ceramics. Since his death over 20 years ago, his work has been often cited for its dramatic visual qualities, its subtle exploration of the boundaries of art and craft, and its lyrical integration of references to nature and the cosmos into an essentially abstract language of form and surface decoration. This is the first single publication to be devoted to his work and will reveal to a new audience the extraordinary range and quality of his achievement. Tower's career was unusual in inhabiting the worlds of fine art and ceramics which, in the 1950s and 1960s, still had only a low level of inter-penetration. Teaching at Corsham brought him into contact with some of the pioneering painters of post-war abstraction, including William Scott, Peter Lanyon and Howard Hodgkin, and as a potter Tower showed his work alongside Bernard Leach and Lucie Rie, contributing to a re-definition of modern craft. During the 1960s and 1970s he worked in white earthenware and bronze, representing a diversity of sculptural practice during a period in which sculptors such as Anthony Caro and Phillip King were experimenting with new materials. From the late 1970s until his death, Tower concentrated again on glazed ceramic forms and was a highly original contributor to the 'New Ceramics'. This book provides a comprehensive visual document of Tower's work, incorporating a complete illustrated catalogue. It includes a detailed and authoritative biography, setting Tower in the social and artistic context in which he lived and worked. Appealing to all those with an interest in post-war art and design, contemporary ceramics and the recent history of art schools, The Ceramic Art of James Tower is set to be the standard source of reference on Tower's work, and a fascinating case-study of the cross-over between the worlds of art and craft.

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'It is almost impossible to dismiss the work of James Tower, one of the finest ceramic artists of the century.' (Paul Rice, British Studio Ceramics, The Crowood Press, 2002) 'The part James Tower played in the history of twentieth century British ceramics has never been fully recognised ... Surely now is the time for a book about his work to be published.' (Sue Varley, Ceramic Review, March/April 2002) 'One of the major ceramists of the 50s, he has been consistently undervalued in the crafts, perhaps because he kept his distance from that world.' (David Whiting, Crafts Magazine, March/April 2004) 'James Tower (1918-88) was an extraordinary ceramicist who many think underrated.' (Andrew Lambirth, The Spectator, December 2003) 'James Tower, who died in 1988, was one of the most original and accomplished ceramicists of his time, a true pioneer of the vessel-as-sculpture ... Tower is still too little celebrated as the artist he was.' (Financial Times, December 2003)