ruth duckworth exhibition

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Ruth Duckworth

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Catalogue of Erskine, Hall & Coe's, Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

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Page 1: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

Ruth Duckworth

Page 2: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

Front cover:Wall Mural, porcelain, 2009(Inv. no. 992110)66 x 96.5 x 15.2 cm(RD-0001)

Overleaf:Wall Mural, porcelain, 2001(Inv. no. 7461001)30.5 x 47 x 15.2 cm(RD-0013)

Ruth Duckworth5 September - 4 October, 2012

Erskine, Hall & Coe Ltd15 Royal Arcade, 28 Old Bond Street

LondonW1S 4SP

+44 (0) 20 7491 [email protected]

Erskine, Hall & Coe would like to thank Thea Burgerfor her generous support and help in making this exhibition possible.

“Play is the essence of creativity. Creative play and gut reaction, instinct. When I work on a piece, I play. I have a whole huge section of the studio where I have an inventory of sculptural forms, simple, abstract, non-specific shapes that I find beautiful and enjoy making. Then I start building these shapes together. And when I find myself smiling, I say “hello!” I think I’ve got something. The process is intuitive, not intellectual. You have to learn to be spontaneous and trust yourself.”

Ruth Duckworth

Page 3: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

Ruth DuckworthHamburg 1919 – Chicago 2009Sculptor and Ceramicist Ruth Duckworth began her artistic career as a stone carver, but soon realised that she loved the medium of clay. Although she was excited by what she could create in clay, her overwhelming ambition was to make very large-scale artworks.

Duckworth was a modernist sculptor who loved form. She was not about colour, but was about the subtle shape of her pieces. Her forms are typically created in porcelain, stoneware, or bronze. Much admired, she has art works in most of the world’s most prestigious museums, including the Metropolitan Museum in New York, the Los Angeles County Museum, the Victoria and Albert, the Stedelijk Museum, and the Tokyo Museum of Art.

Duckworth had the mind and ambition of a sculptor, everything she envisioned could be enlarged. As Emmanuel Cooper commented: “Whatever the actual size of the object they all convey a sensation of massiveness and monumentality.”

Internationally known and respected, Duckworth experienced three different cultures. Born and raised in Germany for the first seventeen years of her life,

she arrived in London in 1936. She wanted to be an artist but had had no special training; safely landed, she learned about art and began her career. She lived and worked in England for thirty years.

She had a minimalist aesthetic and as a young artist admired the works of Brancusi, Moore, and Noguchi. Duckworth, and her fellow Europeans, Lucie Rie and Hans Coper, arrived in England imbued with the European Modernist style. Their work was considered radical, as it was.

In 1964, Duckworth was invited to go to the University of Chicago for a year. There she discovered she would be able to make a living by assembling very large-scale pieces. Unsurprisingly, she decided to settle there, fame and good fortune were to follow.

Duckworth will be remembered in the history of ceramics as someone who took her chosen material and created masterpieces. She created art works that represent her ethos, and what she thought was beautiful. In her early years many pieces were considered unacceptable by the current trends of the time. Time itself established her genius.

Today her example reminds all artists to realise the work they feel driven to create. In this, she has set an example for the young. In recognition for her artistry, she was awarded numerous gold medals, and scholarships in her name were instituted for young ceramic artists. Duckworth herself received several honorary doctorate degrees.

Duckworth stayed in the United States for decades; but England was in her heart. She returned every other year. During the year prior her death she decided to resettle in the United Kingdom. That was not to be. But her heart never left the country, which had accepted her when she and her family were at death’s door. She acknowledged her English education as the basis of her career.

Ruth Duckworth cannot return to England. The works in this exhibition represent her.

Thea BurgerCurator, Private Dealer and Executor of

the Ruth Duckworth Studio Estate

Page 4: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

This page:Untitled, porcelain, 1991(Inv. no. 2961091)15.2 x 36.8 x 34.3 cm(RD-0007)

Opposite:Untitled, porcelain, 2003(Inv. no. 946803)57.2 x 21 x 17.8 cm(RD-0017)

Page 5: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

Untitled, porcelain, 1986(Inv. no. 22886)10.2 x 14 cm(RD-0020)

Opposite:Wall Mural, porcelain, 2002

(Inv. no. 7731002)35.5 x 40 x 16.5 cm

(RD-0005)

Page 6: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

Untitled, porcelain, 2004(Inv. no. 839704)25.4 x 20.3 x 8.9 cm(RD-0010)

Untitled, bronze, 1994(Inv. no. 449994)Edition of 5, No. 4 15.2 x 17.8 x 6.4 cm(RD-0011)

Page 7: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

Untitled, porcelain, 1999(Inv. no. 627399)

36.8 x 22.9 x 19.1 cm(RD-0016)

Untitled, stoneware, 1993(Inv. no. 370493)41.9 x 13.33 x 11.4 cm(RD-0008)

Page 8: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

Opposite:Wall Mural, porcelain, 2009(Inv. no. 998110)22 x 22 x 9.5 cm(RD-0009)

This page:Untitled, porcelain, 2009

(Inv. no. 945809)14 x 10 x 16 cm

(RD-0015)

Page 9: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

Opposite:Untitled, bronze, 2004

(Inv. no. 8711204)A/P from edition of 5(Two cast A/P & 1/5)

40 x 15.2 x 12.7 cm(RD-0006)

“I like the bold directness of the forms. These small Cycladic sculptures are powerful, simple shapes. They are human figures reduced to their essential outlines, yet they convey powerful emotions. I am enthralled by them. They are so perfect- they say so much with so little.”

Ruth Duckworth

Page 10: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

This page:Untitled, bronze, 1994 (Inv. no. 451994)Edition of 5, no. 416.5 x 10 x 10 cm (including base)(RD-0012)

Opposite:Untitled, porcelain, circa 197014 x 12.7 x 12.7 cm(RD-0002)

Page 11: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

Untitled, porcelain, 2009(Inv. no. 955509)12.7 x 15.2 x 10.2 cm(RD-0019)

Untitled, porcelain, 2009(Inv. no. 943809)14 x 12.1 x 11.4 cm(RD-0014)

Page 12: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

This page:Untitled, stoneware, 1986(Inv. no. 29286)40 x 21 x 7.5 cm(RD-0018)

Opposite:Wall Mural, porcelain, 2009(Inv. no. 996110)26 x 44.5 10.8 cm(RD-0003)

Page 13: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

This page:Untitled, Stoneware, 1994(Inv. no. 438894)Candle holder25.7 x 12.7 x 11.9 cm(RD-0022)

Opposite:Untitled, stoneware, 1994(Inv. no. 447794)Candle holder14.6 x 9.5 x 9.5 cm(RD-0021)

Page 14: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition

All quotes are from:Ruth Duckworth Modernist Sculptor Jo Lauria, Tony BirksLund Humphries, 2004

The exhibition will be fully illustrated on our website www.erskinehallcoe.com/exhibitions/ruth-duckworth-2012

photography by Michael Harveyprinted at The Lavenham Pressdesign by fivefourandahalf

© Erskine, Hall & Coe Ltd, 2012

Gallery Opening Hours: Monday to Friday: 10am-6pmSaturdays (during exhibitions only): 10am-6pm

Back cover:Wall Mural, porcelain, 2009(Inv. no. 992110)66 x 96.5 x 15.2 cm(RD-0001)

Ruth Duckworth examining her last bronze sculpture (finished sculpture now located on the campus of

Southern Illinois University) Photograph: Guy Nicol

Ruth Duckworth at her work table, 2000sPhotograph: Guy Nicol

Page 15: Ruth Duckworth Exhibition