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November
11, 2000 through April 29, 2001
Fired by Ideals: Arequipa Pottery
and the Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Special Gallery
Presented by the Art Department
Fired by
Ideals: Arequipa Pottery and the Arts and Crafts Movement is
the first major exhibition of pottery produced at the Arequipa Sanatorium
in Marin County during the years 1911-1918. The exhibition includes
more than 100 pieces in what is thought to be the largest showing
of these works since the Arequipa studio exhibited at the Panama-Pacific
International Exposition of 1915 in San Francisco. A series of public
programs about California pottery will complement the exhibition,
which runs from Nov. 11 through April 29, 2001 at the Oakland Museum
of California.
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Vase,
1913;
Madrona Vase, c. 1911-13,
Bowl, 1912
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Arequipa pottery,
produced by tuberculosis patients at the sanatorium, is recognized
today as among the most important California pottery of the Arts
and Crafts period. This exhibition features examples of the wide
variety of pottery designs and techniques that characterized the
work of the studio. Also included are tiles from Casa Dorinda, a
65-room Spanish Colonial mansion near Santa Barbara that was designed
by Carleton Winslow in 1916. In its largest and final commission,
Arequipa produced 8750 tiles, based on Hispano-Moresque designs
by Frank Ingerson, for the lower great hall and upper corridor of
the mansion.
The exhibition
tells two stories, that of the sanatorium itself and that of the
pottery produced there.
THE
AREQUIPA SANATORIUM
Following the 1906 earthquake and fire, dust- and ash-filled air
contributed to a tuberculosis epidemic in San Francisco. A progressive
San Francisco doctor, Philip King Brown, founded the Arequipa Sanatorium
as a country retreat for urban "working girls" to recuperate from
tuberculosis. The name Arequipa, taken from a city in Peru, was
said to mean "place of peace." Brown acquired a tract of oak-shaded
land outside of Fairfax in Marin County, donated by real estate
developer and philanthropist Henry Bothin. There, with the help
of local artists and members of the area's philanthropic community
(including Phoebe Apperson Hearst, after whom Dr. Brown named his
daughter), he created a campus, with emphasis on outdoor living,
to house and care for tubercular women factory workers, store clerks
and teachers. Besides bed rest, handcraft was deemed therapeutic
in combating idleness and avoiding the stigma of charity.
The philosophy
of Arequipa was a direct outcome of the Arts and Crafts movement,
which, in a reaction to late 19th-century industrialization, advocated
replacement of machine-made goods with handicrafts. The movement
affirmed filling life with substance rather than superficialities,
strove to eliminate what it saw as a false distinction between fine
arts and the applied and decorative arts, and saw handicraft as
having a curative value.
With origins
in England, the movement spread throughout Europe and the United
States, and was at its height in California from the mid-1890s to
the 1930s. Arts and Crafts was a sensibility rather than a specific
style, but in California as elsewhere it tended to employ motifs
derived from nature, simple forms enhanced with complex details,
and to celebrate the vernacular.
THE
POTTERY
The Arequipa Sanatorium was directed by a succession of nationally
known British ceramists: Frederick Hürten Rhead, Albert Solon and
Fred Wilde. The basic shapes of the ceramics created there were
the responsibility of the master potters, and surface decorations
were added by the patients working in the studio or out under the
oak trees. These decorations took the form of designs painted on
the surface and patterns carved into the damp clay or applied in
relief on the pots.
Because of
the rate of turnover of both pottery directors and patients, a wide
variety of designs and techniques characterizes the work of the
studio. The directors experimented continually with glazes, Rhead
developing a mirror black glaze, Solon bright blue-green glazes,
and the studio using cratered glazes and running glazes. Rhead introduced
slip trailing, the signature form of decoration of Arequipa pottery.
The technique uses raised lines of clay, applied to the pots with
a "squeeze bag" technique similar to that used by cake decorators,
to define the design and hold the glaze in place, much as metal
channels do in cloisonné.
The Oakland
Museum of California has the largest existing holding of pottery
and tiles from Arequipa, with more than 100 pieces in its collections.
The majority of these are from the estate of Phoebe Hearst Brown,
daughter of the sanatorium's founder, Philip King Brown. The exhibition
includes pieces from the museum's art and history departments as
well as from the holdings of private collections. Through photographs,
letters, advertisements and other primary documents, the exhibition
also examines Arts and Crafts philosophy as it intersects with social
attitudes towards gender, illness and philanthropy.
Curator of
Fired by Ideals is Suzanne Baizerman, the Imogene Gieling
Curator of Crafts and Decorative Arts at the Oakland Museum of California.
The exhibition
is accompanied by a 120-page catalog with 50 large color illustrations
and 150 smaller photos, coauthored by Baizerman, Arequipa scholar
Lynn Downey and California College of Arts and Crafts faculty member
John Toki.
Fired by
Ideals: Arequipa Pottery and the Arts and Crafts Movement is
made possible by the generous support of the Oakland Museum Women's
Board, Robert E. Hungate and H. Nona Hungate in memory of Alice
Wolcott Hungate, The Bothin Foundation and the Friends of Arequipa
Sponsors Group.
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