Alan Wallwork Studio Totem Vase, signed, 1960s
| Starting Bid: | £30.00 |
| Bid Increment: | £2.00 |
| Next Min Bid: | £32.00 |
| Buyer’s Premium: | £7.20 |
| Total Amount: | £37.20 |
| Number of Bids: | 0 |
| Location: | United Kingdom |
| Highest Bidder: | |
| Auction Start: | 21/11/25 13:15:00 UTC |
| Auction Ending: | 06/12/25 20:00:00 UTC |
| Time Remaining: | 10d 17h 12m |
Alan Wallwork Studio Totem Vase, signed, 1960s
A slab form ceramic vase, rectangular with a slightly countersunk base, the thickly potted walls decorated to the front and reverse with abstract incised designs, a hemisphere, circles and the neck of a vase, the sandy glaze in tones of buff and brown, the sides plain and the base unglazed with a scratched mark ‘W’ to the centre.This is a classic example of the early work of the distinguished British studio potter Alan Wallwork whose pieces now appear in many collections and galleries (see images 15,16). Born in Watford, Hertfordshire, in 1931, Wallwork’s training included a one year spell at Goldsmith’s after which he taught in local schools and then opened his first gallery at Forest Hill in 1958 where he both sold pieces by Lucie Rie and Kenneth Clark, amongst others, and also developed his own work. Eventually finding this too small he moved to a studio in Greenwich where he sold items to Heal’s and the Craft Potters Association, moving yet again to Dorset in 1965 where he continued production for many years. After an illness in the late 1990s, Wallwork opened yet another studio in France in 2004 where he continued to pot but with a rather reduced output. In his last years, his health unfortunately declined and he died in Dorset in 2019.
Wallwork’s work, distinguished by its rugged rustic forms enjoyed great popularity throughout his lifetime. In 2012 he wrote “My pots have no deep ‘message’, or not consciously. They have the simple forms I personally warm to and I try to give them a variety of pattern and texture that I find sympathetic to the touch, not just the eye. Colour is not all important, but surface is. I hope my pots invite being picked up and felt.”
The form of this piece, often described as ‘totem’, dates it to the years in Greenwich, 1960-1965, (see the website alanwallwork.co.uk for more detail on this). In common with other examples it is signed with a single ‘W’ which indicates that it was a studio or apprentice piece rather than hand produced by Wallwork himself, who usually marked his own pieces with both his initials ‘AW’, see ‘British Studio Potters’ Marks’ by Eric Yates-Owen and Robert Fournier (2nd edition 2005 p517). But this should not detract from the vase itself which retains the distinctive appeal of his work and is a particularly striking shape enhanced by the ‘native’ decoration.
| Size: | Ht 21cm, Width 8.5cm, Depth 5.5cm |
| Weight: | 1.37kg |
| Date: | 1960s |
| Condition: | Good condition generally, a chip at the top, two chips at the base (see images 13, 14) |
| Estimate: | £60 – 80 |
