Bronze Age Gold from Wales
Pod Form
Tall vase, earthenware, flattened ovoid form on a flat base tapering to a pointed top with a small ovoid opening on one side; decorated with an elaborate striated pattern in sgraffito through a green glaze overlaying a white tin glaze, the inside glazed in black.
James Tower is associated with the 'Institute of Education' group of the 1950s along with William Newland, Margaret Hine and Nicholas Vergette, all contemporaries at London University after World War II. Collectively and dismissively dubbed the 'Picassiettes' by Bernard Leach, the group developed their own distinctive method of tin-glaze decoration. Before turning to ceramics, Tower trained as a painter at the Royal Academy schools and the Slade School of Art. He did not think of his work as functional and described himself as 'an artist who happens to work in clay'.
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