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Chapter Four: Craftspeople and the Art Craft

               Divide


               A small number of craftspeople in New Zealand openly expressed their views on the

               art and craft question. Others were more circumspect, often refusing to become

               involved in the debate. Another section of the craft community, through their actions
               as advocates of craft or their roles as administrators and leaders of the craft

               movement, clearly were aware that the debate, openly discussed or not, was critical

               to the future of the movement.  As the following profiles of craftspeople and others
               show, the way their careers developed, the type of craft that they produced, how

               their work was received and how involved in craft politics they became determined
               how important the issue was in their lives.


               Open Debate



               Harry Davis


               Harry Davis was a highly regarded English potter who, along with his wife, May

               Davis, emigrated to New Zealand in 1962.  Davis had extensive experience within

               the ceramic industry as a potter, working for Bernard Leach at St Ives Pottery and
               operating his own workshop in Cornwall. In addition, he was a self-educated art

               historian. Davis was vocal in opposing the separation of art and craft primarily
               because he believed that those who attempted to engineer the separation were

               motivated by class distinctions. Davis believed the replacement of ‘workshop’ with

               ‘studio’ signalled the changes taking place within the craft movement as some
               craftspeople began to call themselves artist-craftspeople. They were using the word

               as a form of class division – middle-class craftspeople worked in studios while
               working-class craftspeople (usually men) laboured in workshops. ‘Studio’ therefore,

               was a signifier of social and cultural advancement.


               For twenty years Harry Davis took every opportunity to argue his case for the

               integration of art and craft – or at least a level of acceptance that craft was not
               inferior to art. His views changed over the period, going from advice on crafts being

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