Page 190 - Constructing Craft
P. 190

it became firmly set in the minds of the public. Some craftspeople, intentionally or

               otherwise, seemed to perpetuate the idea even when their approach to their craft
               was far more intense than was generally expected of the more ‘relaxed’ approach

               taken by hippies – for who craft was merely a means of supporting their other
               interests.




               Nicholas Brandon



               One such craftsperson who matched the public idea of a typical hippie was Nicholas
               Brandon. Brandon, who lived in Taranaki, had become a highly proficient potter very

               quickly. He began working with clay in 1971 and by 1977 was recognised by the

               national craft community as one of New Zealand’s best potters. Brandon, with long
               bushy hair and beard, lived in an old, somewhat dilapidated cottage in a rural

               setting. He cultivated his own food and supplemented his diet with scavenged food
               from the surrounding countryside. As if to confirm the perception of someone who

               saw the world in the same way as hippies he wrote in lyrical terms about his pottery.
               He compared his pottery to a child that: ‘in the beginning ... needs the security of

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               constant love, attention and discipline.  Indeed, he did work very hard – often up to
               14 to 18 hours a day – and 40 hours non-stop when a kiln was being fired. ‘You die
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               fulfilling its needs. Yet live again through your pots.’  Using the child allegory again
               he noted: ‘My creative child – now six years old – no longer demands the same

               intensity of attention and discipline – becoming more and more independent –
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               needing only to be love.’


























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