Page 140 - Constructing Craft
P. 140

tenuous. After nine years away from New Zealand he suggested in a 1968 speech

               that the growth of the craft movement was not an isolated event.


                        It  would be too much to claim  that this renaissance has been
                        due mainly to the work of Gordon Tovey and his associates a
                        quarter of a century ago, but I cannot believe their efforts were
                        without  influence  beyond  the  school  walls.  Not  a  few  of  our
                        artists  and  craftsmen  once  worked  in  the  Education  service,
                        and the most flourishing of New  Zealand’s modern handicraft,
                        pottery and weaving, are the very ones we concentrated on in
                        the  primary  schools.  Whether  or  not  the  work  in  schools
                        uncovered  and  stimulated  future  practitioners  is  uncertain  …
                        But I am completely convinced that the schools have helped to
                        produce a generation of people who appreciate painting and the
                        crafts through having practised them, however humbly, in their
                        childhood,  and  who  have  first-hand  understanding  of  the
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                        satisfaction of creating things of beauty.


               Beeby was being modest as he knew that by 1968, as an unintended result of ‘art in
               education’, many of the students and tutors who had been a part of the programme

               were making a living from their art or craft. He also believed that the same
               programme might have provided an audience for their work: ‘And, on a more

               material level, [those who experienced the new art and craft programme] are willing
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               to buy them [arts and craft] and to see a fraction of their taxes spent on them.’  The
               art programme in schools was intended to improve education across the curriculum

               but it had also sown the seeds of the studio craft movement both in terms of
               practitioners and (Beeby hoped) consumers. The close association of craft with art,

               rather than the trades, also encouraged the middle-class to embrace it.




               Craft Education for Adults

               Craft education at the secondary and tertiary level did not progress as rapidly as it
               had in primary schools. Secondary schools remained locked into examination

               schedules that restricted the experimentation that had permitted a considerable
               degree of freedom in primary schools. Furthermore, the art/craft divide seemed to

               produce an insurmountable cultural barrier within secondary schools. There also

               seemed to be no clear pathway between secondary school and later training.
               Apprenticeships in studio craft did not exist and through to the mid-1970s most craft



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