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Jar
Jar, wheel thrown red earthenware, dipped in white slip leaving most of foot rim exposed, with incised decoration, yellow glaze, very uneven over foot rim, large chip/flake above foot rim. Foot rim, oval body and high straight neck. Body of vase incised with small scale like circles and a broad undulating band; band arches over a stylised tree in leaf on either side, and under two pendant Islamic style foliage motifs, neck incised with horizontal lines.
"On the left side of this image is a jar by Bernard Leach. Writing from his St Ives Pottery in January 1924 to his uncle Dr William Evans Hoyle, then the National Museum’s first Director, Bernard Leach described this jar as ‘the best pot of the same [slip] ware which I have made in England’. The tree motif on each side was a Leach favourite, the restless incised lines echoing the style of his etchings, the art form he pursued before taking up pottery. The mottling of the ground was probably done with the wrong end of a bamboo-handled brush. While the pot itself is described by Leach as ‘English slip ware’, the style of decoration echoes the ‘drawing clean and spirited’ of a Chinese Song-dynasty Cizhou stoneware vase that Leach admired.
Leach struggled to make a living in the 1920s and 1930s but went on to become the century’s most influential potter. Through his pots, his writings and his eloquent proselytising, he inspired generations of potters to imitate his Orientalising manner. While he considered East Asian – and particularly Song-dynasty Chinese – pottery to be ‘the noblest achievement in ceramics’, in seventeenth-century English slipware he found an authentic indigenous counterpart worthy of emulation."
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