4 minute read

Studio Ceramics | The Leonard & Alison Shurz Collection | Adam Partridge Auctioneers

Adam Partridge Auctioneers is pleased to be selling the largest collection of studio ceramics ever auctioned in the UK, with more than 1000 lots and some 1500 pots from around the world on sale.

The sale of the Leonard and Alison Shurz collection of studio ceramics is truly a global event with works by British, North American, European and Asian makers. It is so large it will take place over two days, with lots sold by international time zones.

Advertisement

Starting on the evening of Thursday 8 th October at 5pm UK time (so daytime in the US) the sale of over 400 lots by US ceramic artists is timed to appeal to the American market. The auction continues all day Friday 9 th October with over 60 lots of contemporary Japanese and Korean ceramics, 75 lots by European and Middle Eastern artists and concluding with over 470 lots by British and Irish artists.

Born in New York, Leonard Shurz came to London in 1964 where he met Alison, originally from Manchester. They were married in 1972 and moved out to Digswell, Welwyn Garden City, to a modern house with more room for children …. and pots.

Leonard had already started to acquire Lucie Rie’s work and that of Hans Coper, Bernard Leach, Gillian Lowndes, Ruth Duckworth and others, and also works by Scandinavian artists like Berndt Friberg and Alf Jarnestad. The couple, however, stopped collecting for a few years while their children were growing up, and eventually sold the Copers and most of the Ries in the 1980s, initially through Sotheby’s and later Christie’s (after Sotheby’s broke one of their Hans Copers!)

But after the children left home, there was more space … and more time to collect.

The collection grew gradually at first, with an initial focus on Native American pottery, but exponentially over the last 10-15 years with annual visits to America, especially to NCECA (National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts) conferences and US galleries, UK fairs and galleries like Goldmark and Contemporary Ceramics where they were regular buyers.

Jason Wood, Adam Partridge’s Specialist Consultant in Studio Ceramics who is curating the sale writes: ‘Leonard and Alison had bought from some of our past auctions so I knew of them but had no idea of the size and range of the collection until I visited the house in Digswell in January 2020. Even before entering, the collection announced itself in the form of an Alan Wallwork tile fashioned as a door knob but nothing quite prepared me for the sheer quantity (and quality) that lay inside. Every room was stacked high with exceptional ceramics from leading makers from around the world’.

The Shurzs had a particular interest in American wood-fired pottery and amassed probably the largest collection of such works outside the US. Highlights include over 50 works by the Hawaiian potter Clayton Amemiya, some 30 works by Indiana-based potter Dick Lehman, and a host of others – quite literally an A-Z of the current American studio ceramics scene.

Among the Asian contemporary ceramicists, highlights include groups of works by the Korean artist Lee Kang-hyo, while Japanese artists Ken Matsuzaki, Natsu Nishiyama and Shikamaru Takeshita are also well represented.

Five works by Berndt Friberg head the European and Middle Eastern section, including other renowned representatives of the illustrious Scandinavian ceramic design movement of the 20 th century, along with more contemporary works by potters like Anne Metter Hjortshoj from Denmark. The collection also includes rare works by Iraqi potter Saad Shakir and the Iranian artist Shabanali Ghorbani. France and Germany are also well represented with some 35 slipware pots by Jean-Nicolas Gérard, as well as works by the woodfirers Markus Klausmann and Uwe Löellmann.

Highlights among the British and Irish artists are five works by Lucie Rie, including a rare porcelain sgraffito bottle acquired from Rie’s personal collection, two small sculptures by Ruth Duckworth and three early works by Gillian Lowndes. The vast majority, however, are works by living UK artists and reads like a roll-call of the current British scene. Well represented are Richard Batterham, Svend Bayer, Clive Bowen, Chris Carter, Nic Collins, Mike Dodd, Jack Doherty, Lisa Hammond, Akiko Hirai, Jim Malone, Phil Rogers, Ruthanne Tudball and Rachel Wood, and many, many more.

As well as being very knowledgeable and supportive of potters it is worth noting that the Shurzs were especially encouraging of younger artists, both in the US and UK, and bought not out of sympathy but because they liked the work and enjoyed meeting the makers, sometimes driving for hours through the American North West to seek out new talent (with the consequential headache of how to ship their purchases back to the UK). The collection therefore contains many up-and-coming names that will be new to some collectors but definitely ones to watch for the future.

This article is from: