TIME FOR TEA

Highlights

A British Council exhibition.

This exhibition was commissioned by Cultura Inglesa in Rio de Janeiro and featured 80 teapots from the British Council collection, made by British potters from the 1930s to the present day. The exhibition explored various methods of fabrication from the hand-crafted to the machine-made and small production ware; the diversity of styles and methods employed in making teapots reflected the varying approaches of British potters and designers to their crafts. Included in the exhibition were works from key potteries such at the Leach Pottery in St Ives, and work by three generations of the Cardew family. A specially commissioned reproduction of the famous giant teapot (capacity 6¼ gallons) first made by Michael Cardew, a former student of Bernard Leach, and shown at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York in 1942 was included as were production ware pieces y Susie Cooper and Clarice Cliff. Other works of note were hand-built pots by Jill Crowley an d Kate Malone, two stoneware iron glaze pots by Geoffrey Whiting an a porcelain teapot by one his student, Edmund de Waal. There was also factory produced tableware by Wedgwood and Cornish ware, as well as many other whimsical and unique works by artist-potters and ceramicists. A catalogue with a foreword by Andrea Rose and entries by Diana Eccles was published in three language versions to accompany the tour. ISBN 0 86355 359 1 (English) ISBN 0 86355 361 3 (Portuguese) ISBN 0 86355 362 1 (Spanish)

Glossary (3)

  • Glaze

    Vitreous coatings applied to pottery to make objects watertight and as a form of decoration. Also a glaze can be a thin, translucent or transparent coating applied to the surface of a painting to modify the colour tones. Glazes may also be applied on top of one another as a means of creating a sense of depth and translucency.

  • Porcelain

    One of the three major types of pottery, the others being stoneware and earthenware. Porcelain is fired in the region of 1300ºC to produce a white vitrified and translucent body.

  • Stoneware

    One of the three major types of pottery, the others being earthenware and porcelain. A buff, gray or brown clay is mixed with other clays and ceramic materials to make a heavy, opaque, highly plastic clay body that is fired at a high temperature - above 1200ºC. It is in between earthenware and porcelain in its character. The term stoneware also refers to the clay body and objects made from it.

Past venues

  • Poland, Poznan, Centrum Kultury Zamek
    • 15 November 2001
  • Poland, Krakow, BWA Gallery
    • 12 October 2001
  • Poland, Lodz, Museum Sztuki
    • 13 September 2001
  • Romania, Constanta, Constanta Art Museum
    • 01 August 2001
  • Romania, Buchrest, Cotroceni Palace
    • 01 July 2001
  • Romania, Sinaia, Peles Castle
    • 01 June 2001
  • Estonia, Rakvere Linnagaleri
    • 16 May 2001
  • Estonia, Tallinn, Linnagalerii
    • 06 April 2001
  • Lithuania, Vilnius, Centre Of Contemporary Art
    • 01 March 2001
  • Kazakhstan, Almaty, State Museum Of Fine Arts
    • 15 December 2000
  • Singapore, British Council Gallery
    • 27 January 2000
  • Malaysia, Penang, Penang State Museum And Art Gallery
    • 27 October 1999
  • Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, National Art Gallery
    • 16 September 1999
  • Peru, Arequipa, Centro Cultural Chaves De La Rosa
    • 27 November 1998
  • Mexico, Mexico City, British Council Office - Mexico City
    • 06 July 1998
  • Colombia, Bogota, Deimos Gallery
    • 15 April 1998
  • Bolivia, La Paz, Museo Nacional De Arte
    • 11 February 1998
  • Peru, Trujillo, Banco Wiese
    • 15 January 1998
  • Peru, Lima, Museo De La Nacion
    • 16 October 1997 − 16 November 1997
  • Brazil, Sao Paulo, Brasilian Society For Japanese Culture
    • 28 August 1997 − 01 September 1997
  • Brazil, Belo Horizonte, Banco De Desenvolviment O De Minas Gerais
    • 09 August 1997 − 17 August 1997
  • Brazil, Sao Paulo, Brasileira Sao Paulo
    • 15 July 1997 − 03 August 1997
  • Brazil, Blumenau, Cultura Inglesa
    • 04 July 1997 − 11 July 1997
  • Brazil, Curitiba, Cultura Inglesa
    • 17 June 1997 − 28 June 1997
  • Brazil, Museu Da Republica
    • 23 May 1997 − 08 June 1997
  • Brazil, Brasilia, Cultura Inglesa
    • 13 May 1997 − 17 May 1997
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