Globular pot
Bryan Newman
Life Story
The scale of this tiny thrown globular form by Bryan Newman encourages close looking. Surface cracks have been made by string, which has been dipped in slip and tied around the vessel immediately after it has been thrown. During firing the string has fused on top but fallen away and left an imprint on the unglazed sides. Newman’s early works in the Sainsbury Centre Collection (see also 50761 and 50792) further demonstrate his experimental and inventive approach to clay.
Newman studied and taught at Camberwell College of Art. His work is associated with the wider sculptural studio ceramic movement of the 1960s and the work of ceramicists including Dan Arbeid, Ian Auld, Ruth Duckworth and Gordon Baldwin. However, unlike them, alongside his abstract and figurative sculptural works he made an extensive range of domestic standardware at the Aller Pottery in Somerset, which he established in 1966 with his wife, Julia Newman.
Sim Panaser, July 2020
Further Reading
Birks, Tony, Art of the Modern Potter, (London: Country Life Books)
Birks, Tony, ‘The Newmans at Aller’, Ceramic Review, 43 (January/February 1977), 4-7
Not on display
Title/Description: Globular pot
Artist/Maker: Bryan Newman
Born: 1970 - 1976
Materials: Ceramic
Technique: Throwing
Accession Number: 50793
Historic Period: 20th century
Production Place: Britain, England
Copyright: © Estate of the Artist
Credit Line: Accepted under the Cultural Gifts Scheme by HM Government from Leslie Birks Hay and allocated to SCVA, 2016