School of Art

Contact Details

School of Art
Aberystwyth University
Buarth Mawr
Aberystwyth
Ceredigion
SY23 1NG

Tel: +44 (0)1970 622460

Fax: +44 (0)1970 622461

Email: artschool@aber.ac.uk


Display artist/maker:

Michael Ambrose Cardew

Born: 1901, UK, England, London, Wimbledon   Died: 1983, UK, England, Cornwall, Truro

Ceramicist. Cardew studied humanities at Exeter College, Oxford but decided to devote himself to the potter’s craft, learning pottery during summer vacations at Braunton Pottery. He joined Bernard Leach and Shoji Hamada at St Ives in 1923, where he began to develop his interest in the English slipware tradition.

In 1926, Cardew branched out and acquired the Winchcombe Pottery in Gloucestershire, where there was a very large, wood-fired bottle kiln. Clay was extracted from the land adjacent to the pottery. Most of the output of the period 1926-39 was slip-decorated earthenware with galena glaze. The pots in Aberystwyth’s collection are nearly all of this period.

In 1939, Cardew set up another pottery at Wenford Bridge, but the outbreak of the Second World War disrupted his plans. In 1942 he first went to Ghana as a pottery instructor and later set up the Pottery Training Centre in Abuja, Nigeria. He remained in West Africa for long periods until his retirement in 1965, helping to develop stoneware using local materials. Cardew’s later work is strongly influenced by his experiences in Africa.

The pottery at Wenford Bridge was run by Ivan McMeekin, and from there Cardew produced stoneware with painted decoration. He also spent time in his later years lecturing, travelling and writing. He was awarded an MBE in 1964 and an OBE in 1981. His autobiography ‘Michael Cardew, A Pioneer Potter’ was published posthumously by his son, Seth, in 1988.

Objects in the collections associated with this artist/maker

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C1763 Ceramics

[Baking/Serving dish] C1363 Ceramics

[Bottle] C239 Ceramics

[Bottle] C240 Ceramics

[Bowl] C252 Ceramics

[Bowl] C253 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1750 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1751 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1752 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1753 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1754 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1767 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1768 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1770 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1777 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1778 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1779 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1780 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1781 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1782 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1783 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1784 Ceramics

[Bowl] C1785 Ceramics

[Bowl] C2012 Ceramics

[Bread Croc] C1805 Ceramics

[Bulb bowl] C255 Ceramics

[Casserole] C1765 Ceramics

[Chalice] C1746 Ceramics

[Coffee bowl] C1786 Ceramics

[Coffee bowl] C1787 Ceramics

[Coffee bowl] C1788 Ceramics

[Coffee bowl] C1789 Ceramics

[Coffee bowl with handles] C1769 Ceramics

[Covered Dish] C1809 Ceramics

[Cup and Saucer] C1794 Ceramics

[Cup and Saucer] C1795 Ceramics

[Cup and Saucer] C1796 Ceramics

[Cup and Saucer] C1797 Ceramics

[Cup and Saucer] C1798 Ceramics

[Cup and Saucer] C1799 Ceramics

[Dish] C264 Ceramics

[Dish] C265 Ceramics

[Dish] C266 Ceramics

[Dish] C1812 Ceramics

[Drug pot] C246 Ceramics

[Drug pot] C249 Ceramics

[Gwari Casserole] C1756 Ceramics

[Gwari Casserole] C1757 Ceramics

[Gwari Casserole] C1758 Ceramics

[Gwari Casserole] C1759 Ceramics

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