Page 27 - Constructing Craft
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New Zealand and was generally argued in a more informed – and acrimonious –

               manner. The protagonists were divided between those who looked to the Arts and
               Craft movement for guidance and those who believed that Modernism was where

               the future of craft lay.


               Conflicting Influences and Ideas

               Most of the people who became involved in making handcraft after the Second

               World War were not producing objects that replicated Arts and Crafts designs; nor
               were they imitating the minimalist objects that were created in the Modernist art

               schools of Europe. New Zealand potters, weavers and other craftspeople looked to
               the local environment for materials – often because they could not be imported –

               and looked to famous craftspeople such as Bernard Leach for inspiration. Their

               work was often rough and imperfect, which, according to the New Zealand writer,
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               Peter Cape, was a reaction to the ‘dehumanising process of the machine’.  To
               some extent then, this was the beginning of a movement that looked back to earlier
               ideas about the role of craft in society, but was also looking to how it might develop

               in the future – and develop a uniquely New Zealand quality.


               New Zealand Craft Traditions

               The second strand that influenced the studio craft movement were the skills that

               lingered on in industry and in the rural environment from earlier times and the craft
               skills used in the homes and hobby workshops of New Zealand. In the late

               nineteenth and early twentieth century, craft in New Zealand was understood to be

               a part of two distinct social locations – work and leisure. In industry and agriculture
               the skills that were most valuable were those that contributed to the productivity of

               the particular business. At home skills often were centred on product substitution or
               repairs and were not measured in financial terms. Hobbyists usually did not expect

               a financial reward for their work. Later craftspeople in their attempts to understand
               where they were located in society in relation to the trades and the arts had to

               determine from where the studio crafts had emerged.


               Craft and Work

               Craft in industry and agriculture was associated with a high level of skill or as a form

               of demarcation between workers. In this environment craft was an occupation that


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