FIGURATIVELY
SPEAKING: A CERAMIC ARTS STUDIO OVERVIEW
by Donald-Brian Johnson
Those
appealing families of little pottery dogs and cats fashioned with tails that
hang over the edge of the whatnot shelf are as distinctive in their manufacture
as in their design. From their very beginnings they are different from other
little animal figures sought and bought by collectors. They come not from
famous potteries in California or Ohio, where much of the pottery sold in local
stores is made, but from a little known firm in Madison, Wisconsin. They are
made, not in a streamlined factory filled with the most modern of equipment,
but in what was once a garage and a candy store, with the simplest kind of
homemade machinery.
Ceramic Arts Studio, 8-12 N. Blount St.,
Madison, WI
Their
producers are not artisans long skilled in the pottery-making craft directing
experienced workers, but a man who started out to be a lawyer, and a young
woman who never studied art beyond ordinary high school classes, working with a
small group of housewives who never wielded a paint brush or handled clay
before.
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Decorators at Work |
A gathering of Studio staff (Betty Harrington is third from left) |
That they
have achieved a successful ceramics business is almost as much a surprise to
Reuben Sand, president of the company, and Betty Harrington, designer, as it is
to a stranger hearing about their trials and tribulations, their failures and
successes.
The Milwaukee
Journal
December 13,
1944
For a time
during the 1940s and early '50s, it seemed as if almost every "name"
in the manufacture of ceramic figurines hailed from California. Hedi Schoop,
Kay Finch, Kaye of Hollywood, Yona,
Dorothy Kindell, and many more were based on the west coast; for collectors,
the words "California" and "ceramics" are almost indelibly
linked. But the best-selling ceramics designer of the '40s and 50's wasn't
Hedi, Dorothy, or Yona. And it wasn't Kay, (or Kaye) either.
To find the
top seller in decorative ceramics, it's necessary to move much further inland--to
the Midwest, in fact. The city was Madison, Wisconsin. The company was Ceramic
Arts Studio. The designer was Betty Harrington. And for 15 years, the product
created by the Studio was the prime choice of giftware buyers. During its peak
production period in the late 1940s, the Studio turned out in excess of 500,000
pieces per year.
The Road to
Success
The reasons
for the overwhelming popularity of Ceramic Arts are simple. To begin with,
World War II had virtually closed off the import of giftware from overseas,
greatly increasing the demand for domestic product. Then there was the CAS
attention to detail. Ceramic Arts Studio figurines combine uniquely imaginative
design with a high degree of skill in execution. Many studios relied on the
shape or stance of a figure, coupled with broad decorating strokes, to suggest
an attitude or theme. Ceramic Arts figures achieve their impact through
artistically heightened realism. The CAS decorating technique focused on
finely-depicted features and intricate nuances of costume. Vivid colors, as
well as a characteristic high gloss glaze, add to the effect. And, there are
the poses: each Ceramic Arts Studio figure seems captured while in motion, a
three-dimensional snapshot preserving a very specific action and moment in
time. One can easily imagine a Ceramic Arts figure springing to life; it's a
bit more difficult imagining an equally lovely, but more abstractly realized,
Hedi Schoop figure doing the same.
Left: Heidi Schoop Oriental Girl Right: CAS “Shepherdess”
Most
importantly, Ceramic Arts Studio owes its success, and ongoing popularity with
collectors, to the artistry of its primary designer Betty Harrington. Prior to
her arrival in 1942, CAS was a small, but promising pottery firm. Afterward, it
was a force to be reckoned with.
Ceramic Arts
Studio had been founded in 1940 as a collaboration between entrepreneur Reuben
Sand and potter Lawrence Rabbitt. Following limited initial success with
hand-thrown pots by Rabbitt, Sand began looking for other opportunities to
increase the firm’s share of a market left open by the curtailment of overseas
imports. Luckily for all concerned, Betty Harrington became that opportunity.
She was the right person, at the right time, in exactly the right place.
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CAS
Founder Lawrence Rabbitt |
Studio Owner/ Co-Founder Reuben Sand |
An Artist
Emerges
Mrs.
Harrington was, by her own description, a self-taught artist with only brief formal
training. Since childhood, she had kept a scrapbook filled with her sketches,
as well as illustrations that inspired her. Betty said that her interest in art
was "just always there, like your nose or your eyes. It was just second
nature".
A full time
secretarial employee for the state of Wisconsin, Harrington happened upon the
Ceramic Arts Studio while searching for a source to fire a figurine made for
her own enjoyment. That first figurine, the Blue Nude Incense Burner was
sculpted on impulse, from blue clay excavated during a well installation at the
Harrington home. Impressed with the quality of the piece, Sand asked Harrington
if she would be willing to make other figures, bring them in, and have molds
made of them. The answer was an enthusiastic “yes”! In Betty’s words, “I was surprised and a little flattered, I
think, and ready and willing—I mean, it was such fun to try!”
Betty Harrington modeling for “Wisconsin
State Employee Magazine” September, 1939
Juggling two
jobs along with an active home life was strenuous, but Betty never regretted
the frantic pace. After a year, she began a full-time association with Ceramic
Arts Studio. Her pleasure in finding this ideal outlet for her creative
energies still remained evident years after the Studio's close. She explained
her rationale in trading an established career for a brand-new one as "oh,
the fascination--it was so tempting--I just couldn't wait to get my hands on
that stuff. It was just a mad desire is I guess what it was."
Betty Harrington at work in “Betty’s
Corner” at the Studio
Onward and
Upward
Reuben
Sand's business acumen quickly came into play, successfully marketing Betty's rapidly expanding parade
of ceramic creations to major retailers. Soon, the shelves of such giftware-starved
giants as Marshall Field’s were bursting with CAS pieces. Thanks to frequent
gift-show exposure, Ceramic Arts proved particularly popular in major
metropolitan areas, including Chicago and New York, as well as in California,
despite stiff competition from the local product.
A T.A. Chapman Co. ad for the “Children’s
Orchestra”, circa 1948
CAS
retailers were assiduously cultivated; both Sand and Harrington took note of their
comments and interests in planning additions to the line. When Dutch or dancer
couples, for instance, proved strong sellers, variations with a similar theme
were introduced (in the case of Oriental figures, enough were added to populate
a small village!) An extended "skunk family" was the result of one
prominent store's desire for figurines which would appropriately accent its
perfume displays.
The “Square Dance Couple”
Betty firmly
believed that "any little novelty thing is good in decorative pieces;
people always want something to talk about, you know". One such innovation
was the CAS shelf-sitter. These were figurines designed to perch on a shelf
with their legs (or, in the case of animals, their tails or paws), dangling
over the edge. Another innovation occurred much later in the Studio's history.
Betty's interest in the costume designs of modern dance pioneer Martha Graham
led to a series of arts-inspired draped figures, with arms and legs fully, or
partially, concealed under flowing garments. This simple and modern styling
elevated CAS design to a new level. Not only did the body draping result in
what Betty called "beautiful, graceful forms", it also had a more
practical result: exquisite detail was realized with a minimum of time and
labor. In the cost-conscious later years of CAS, this proved important.
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“Farmer Boy & Girl” |
“Bruce & Beth” on a Metal Stand byReuben Sand’s Jon-San Creations |
Betty
Harrington had "sketched since the beginning of time, it seems like",
and many of the sketches and ideas kept in her
scrapbook over the years now came to life at Ceramic Arts. Her work
embraced themes popular with buyers of the time--animals (one top seller,
"Frisky Lamb" sold over 100,000 units), birds, children (some modeled
after her own daughters), and figures in ethnic or period attire, as well as
arts-related, nursery story, and fantasy figures. Some CAS pieces also had
practical applications: banks, bells, candleholders, salt-and-pepper shakers,
and head vases. A few were featured on lamps by 1950s icon Moss Manufacturing.
Others were available with accent pieces, such as thematic metal stands and
shadow boxes.
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Betty Harrington’s Sketches for the
Egyptians |
“ Barbie” Head Vase |
With every
new design, extensive research went into making certain each detail of attire
and pose was authentic and suitable. Research and authenticity, however, would
have been nothing without the added ingredient of Harrington's creative spark.
It often took the designer to new and uncharted realms of the imagination.
"You took a piece of clay”, she recalled, “and you formed it into whatever
was in your mind. Sometimes along the way, the clay would sort of take over and
do its own thing, and you'd get something into it that you hadn't intended in
the beginning. Especially on people figurines--they took on their own
personality--a tilt of a head, a position of an arm, making it look different.
And it wasn't intentional in my mind, but I'd see it there when I was doing it,
and it looked good, so I'd do it that way."
Detail “Maurice & Michelle”
End of An
Era
The heady
success enjoyed by Ceramic Arts Studio went into a gradual, but irreversible
decline, with the end of World War II, and the resumption of overseas imports.
Lower operating costs, cheaper materials, and inexpensive labor meant overseas
manufacturers could supply giftware at a fraction of the CAS cost. While the
quality was, in almost every case, inferior, stores with an eye on the bottom
line began stocking imported pieces, rather than those by Ceramic Arts and
other domestic firms. By 1955, the 500,000 pieces produced annually by CAS in
the late 1940s had dwindled to a low of 10,000.
Ceramic Arts
Studio closed its doors in 1955. Some of its molds found their way to Japan,
where pieces of CAS design, but now in lurid hues, were marketed. Eventually,
all molds were destroyed, and the Madison, Wisconsin site once occupied by
Ceramic Arts Studio became a parking lot, its only identifier today a State
Historical Marker.
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Import Versions of the CAS “Shadow Dancers” |
State Historical
Marker at the Ceramic Arts
Studio Site |
The Legacy
Lives On
Fortunately,
the unique talent of Betty Harrington and her CAS associates lives on, in the
800-plus designs created under the Ceramic Arts banner, as well as in the
individual works Harrington created before, after, and concurrent with the
Studio years. The Ceramic Arts Studio heritage has received ongoing exposure
through the Ceramic Arts Collectors Association, and its successor, the
newly-formed Ceramic Arts Collectors. Additionally, the new
book Ceramic Arts Studio: The Legacy of Betty Harrington by Donald-Brian
Johnson, Timothy J. Holthaus, and James E. Petzold, explores the CAS phenomenon
in full, giving the stories behind the creation of each piece. Sketches from
Harrington’s personal scrapbook, vintage promotional materials, personal
reminiscences, and photos of the
objects themselves, evoke both the era, and the aura, of the Ceramic Arts
Studio.
After many
years of relative obscurity, the rediscovery of her work, and subsequent
acclaim by collectors and critics, caught Betty Harrington by surprise. Her
response was completely in character:
"I'm
sort of amazed--I don't quite understand it. Although for the first time in my
life--and it's taken me this long--I think I did good work. I always felt my
work was amateurish and unacceptable because I hadn't had any training in the
arts at all--it was just a natural thing that was in my mind without having to
think about it. But I'm mighty proud that so many people like it."
Betty
Harrington’s creative impulse remained strong, and long-lived. She died on
March 29, 1997, at the age of 83; her last work, M’amselle, debuted in
1996.
A glazed and finished “M’amselle” with new castings in the background
What
accounts for the ongoing, and irresistible appeal of Ceramic Arts pieces? In
addition to their obvious high quality of execution, there's also an underlying
sense of joy that permeates and enlivens every piece. It's the simple joy found
when artistic expression is given free, unfettered rein. It's a joy that can be
directly traced to the designer. Of her years at Ceramic Arts Studio, Betty
Harrington once said "I just loved every minute of it." It shows.
“Adonis & Aphrodite”
The pieces
you see here are originals, not copies. Most are by Betty Harrington, one of the
Country’s most versatile and gifted designers of ceramics. Painstaking,
ofttimes laborious handwork gives fine detail and deep, lustrous glaze effects,
resulting in a Studio piece of considerable individuality. In its price range,
our line is of the finest. You may order with confidence.
Ceramic Arts
Studio catalog, 1954