Page 205 - Constructing Craft
P. 205

vary  their  work  and  so  eliminate  boredom  and  create
                        stimulation.  However  the  price  that  most  men  pay  to  receive
                        their  weekly  money  packet  by  enduring  boredom  is  quite
                        remarkable.  There  is  nothing  wrong  with  making  money.  It  is
                        the way in which the money is made that I am considering. The
                        man who is concerned with the intricacies and problems of his
                        work there and then is a much happier character than he who
                        cannot  throw  his  spirit  into  it.  If  both  men  receive  the  same
                                                                                 27
                        wages the former man becomes the richer of the two.

               The idea that undertaking a multitude of tasks meant that craftspeople could ‘lose’

               themselves in their work to the exclusion of all else was an attractive notion. But for
               the more commercial-minded craftsperson, or small craft studio employing a

               number of people, the division of labour was as important as it was in many other

               modern businesses. Mundane tasks, often performed by those with fewer skills,
               were a part of the work that had to be done. Brickell’s ‘Zen-like’ approach was, for

               most craftspeople, an ideal, not a reality. Unlike Brickell ‒ a single man with no
               dependents ‒ most craftspeople had added responsibilities such as supporting a

               family.


































                                   Barry Brickell at Driving Creek Pottery. The cover
                                   epitomises a number of the characteristics that New
                                   Zealanders associated with the studio craft movement:
                                   the rural life in the New Zealand environment, the
                                   independent working life, the ‘do it yourself’ ethos, and
                                   the construction and use of alternative machinery.
                                   Photo: New Zealand Potter.

                                                                          Constructing Craft
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