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Four cubes

Four cubes

  • Place of origin:

    London, England (made)

  • Date:

    1971 (made)

  • Artist/Maker:

    Barton, Glenys (maker)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    Bone china, slip-cast, with silk-screened decoration

  • Museum number:

    CIRC.277 to C-1973

  • Gallery location:

    Studio Ceramics, room 142, case 17, shelf 1

  • Image in copyright

Glenys Barton is one of a remarkable group of women ceramicists who emerged from the Royal College of Art in London during the 1970s. The group includes Jill Crowley, Alison Britton, Jacqui Poncelet, Carol McNicoll and Elizabeth Fritsch. Barton is the most purely sculptural of any in this group, and was among the first potters of her generation to be solely represented by a 'fine art' gallery. These cubes, which were made in sets of four, were exhibited in the International Ceramics exhibition in 1972 at the V&A, and were awarded a Diploma of Merit by the International Jury. They are cast in bone china (porcelain with added bone ash) and are ground to the required degree of accuracy after the biscuit (initial) firing.

Physical description

Decoration: each cube with a different geometrical pattern in black and yello

Place of Origin

London, England (made)

Date

1971 (made)

Artist/maker

Barton, Glenys (maker)

Materials and Techniques

Bone china, slip-cast, with silk-screened decoration

Dimensions

Depth: 5.30 cm, Height: 5.30 cm

Object history note

Acquisition details: the potter, London

RF number: 73/1369

Bibliographic References (Citation, Note/Abstract, NAL no)

Watson, Oliver. British Studio Pottery. Oxford: Phaidon; Christie's Limited; in association with the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1990. ISBN 0 7 148 8067 1

Exhibition History

British Design 1948–2012: Innovation in the Modern Age (Victoria and Albert Museum 31/03/2012-12/08/2012)

Materials

Bone china

Categories

Studio Ceramics

Collection code

CER

Qr_O19135
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