Harrison McIntosh
Harrison McIntosh | |
---|---|
Born | Vallejo, California, US |
September 11, 1914
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Claremont, California, US |
Nationality | American |
Education | Claremont Graduate School |
Harrison Edward McIntosh (11 September 1914 – 21 January 2016) was an American ceramic artist. He was an exponent of the Mid-century Modern style of ceramics, featuring simple symmetrical forms. His work has been exhibited in venues in the United States including the Smithsonian and internationally including at the Louvre in Paris.
Contents
Biography
Early Years
Harrison Edward McIntosh was born in Vallejo, California to Harrison McIntosh, a ragtime piano player, and Jesusita McIntosh née Coronado.[1] McIntosh grew up in Stockton, California, where his father worked for Sperry Flour Company. At the time, the city of Stockton was building the Haggin Museum, which first inspired McIntosh’s interest in the arts and architecture.[2] In high school, McIntosh and his younger brother Robert McIntosh took informal painting lessons with Arthur Haddock. Both McIntosh and his brother continued to pursue art after high school; Robert as a painter and Harrison as sculptor.[3] Two years after McIntosh graduated in 1933, he became a camp artist at a Civilian Conservation Corps camp, while his brother Robert received a scholarship to attend Art Center School, now Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CA. In 1937, after almost two years as a camp artist with the CCC, McIntosh moved down to Los Angeles and took classes at Art Center for six months.[1]
McIntosh began working at the Foundation of Western Art in 1938, where he would work in the mornings as a gallery attendant and assistant.[2] He would also work on commissions for Gustav Gilbert, owner of the arts material store The Louvre, making hand-carved picture frames for his store.[1] At Harrison's suggestion, his parents hired Richard Neutra to build their new home. McIntosh assisted Neutra with the design and building; in the process, he learned design principles and incorporated a workshop space into the garage. These years marked McIntosh’s first exposure to many of the famous California painters at the time, including Millard Sheets, as well as influential early ceramicists such as Gertrud and Otto Natzler.[4]
Career
McIntosh first explored ceramics when he began to take classes in the medium with Glen Lukens at the University of Southern California. After a few classes, McIntosh began to work on a turning wheel meant for carving cast works in his studio, where he would often experiment with layered glazes. These early experimental pieces typically were sold for a few dollars. In 1942, McIntosh married fellow artist Mary Stanfield. The next year, he, his brother, and ceramicist Albert Henry King put together a small gallery space on Sunset Strip called The Californians. With the United States' involvement in World War II, however, these plans came to a halt as he was drafted into the army as a medic in Northern California. During this time, McIntosh’s wife became critically ill, and he was discharged to care for her. After six years of marriage, Stanfield died.[1]
In 1948, McIntosh was able to use the GI Bill to study ceramics in the MFA program through the Claremont Graduate School directed by Millard Sheets.[5] There, he studied ceramics under Richard Petterson at Scripps College, in addition to attending workshops with Bernard Leach at Mills College, with Shōji Hamada the Japanese ceramicist during his US tour, and with Marguerite Wildenhain at Pond Farm during the summer of 1953.[4] McIntosh also met his second wife, Marguerite Loyau, in one of Petterson’s classes at Scripps College. Loyau was visiting from France on a Fullbright Scholarship to teach French at Pomona College. They married in 1952 and two years later gave birth to their daughter, Catherine McIntosh. Marguerite became her husband’s business manager, often collaborating with him on design projects and organizing exhibitions of his work.[2]
During his time at CGU, McIntosh became friends with fellow student and ceramicist Rupert Deese, with whom he opened a studio on Foothill Boulevard in Claremont, California. McIntosh and Deese worked together as business partners and friends for the next 50 years, first in the Foothill Boulevard space from 1950 to 1958, and then in a studio at Padua Hills until 2006. In addition to his lasting relationship with Deese, McIntosh was also close with many other Claremont artists such as Jim Hueter, Karl Benjamin, and Sam Maloof.[3]
For various intervals between 1956 to 1959, McIntosh taught at the Los Angeles Country Art Institute, now the Otis College of Art and Design, where he became friends with fellow teacher Peter Voulkos. Here he met Paul Soldner, John Mason, and Kenneth Price, who, with Voulkos, were translating the budding Abstract Expressionist movement into their work with clay. While he deeply respected their work, McIntosh found that he was not satisfied by working as a fine artist: “I was more interested in working with a medium I enjoyed and making things that other people enjoyed”.[5] He soon left the teaching position to pursue his studio work full time.
In the first two decades of his career, McIntosh sold his work at various home-furnishing stores such as Bullocks Wilshire, Van Kepple Green in Beverly Hills, and Abacus in Pasadena. McIntosh also worked as an employee at Metlox Manufacturing Company in the 1950s and at Interpace International Pipe and Ceramics Corporation in the 1960s. From 1970 to 1980, McIntosh and his wife travelled to Japan during the summers to jointly design dinnerware and glassware collections for Mikasa.[3]
Over his more than 60-year career, McIntosh had 43 solo exhibitions. He is represented in over 40 art collections, including the Smithsonian Institute’s Renwick Gallery in Washington D.C., the Louvre in Paris, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Mingei Museum in Japan.
References
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