STEVE
SMITH & TERRY HALLORAN
FREEHAND PAINTED CHINA
NGarners is delighted to be able to introduce you to the work of Stephen Smith and
Terry Halloran, artists with an international reputation
in the freehand painting of exquisite copper enamels
and china.
Steve
and Terry are exceptionally talented ceramic artists
with almost 80 years experience in the field between
them. Having worked for many large companies in
the past
(including
Royal Worcester and Moorcroft Enamels) they decided,
in late 2006, that they would work independently under
their own names to revive an ancient craft.
Steve
and Terry wanted to return to traditional methods where
every part of the process was carried out by hand and
the very highest standards of design and finish were
achieved.
They
wanted to offer their loyal collectors a level of quality
and value that large companies could not match. Freehand
painted china is an ancient craft but is rarely offered
today because it is so labour intensive. Because of
high overheads in these companies, the artist costs
might be as little as one tenth of the eventual retail
price, making pieces very expensive. Designs were usually
determined by cost restraints with limited subjects
and very little background detail. The artist might
also have to paint repetitively, and not always to the
highest standard, in order to complete large editions.
Steve and Terry's pieces that are painted internally
as well as externally are probably unique in the thousand
year history of the craft and something quite extraordinary
in today's fine art market. The level of detail they
achieve on the outside of a piece is probably unparalled,
but it is almost certainly the first time anyone has
attempted it on the INSIDE
of a piece of china.
They
work extremely hard and take great pride in offering
the highest quality as competitively as possible. For
example, their "inside-outside" prestige pieces,
retailing at around £1100, may take three weeks
to design and about a week to paint each one of the
edition. They would have had to retail at a price of
over £3000 were they still working within a company
structure. Edition sizes are kept low (maximum 10) and
their annual output is small - hence only a very small
number of retailers can be supplied. Around 95% of their
production for 2008 had sold by early 2009.
Steve
and Terry design the shape of a piece before taking
it to a local master china maker, Mark Lewis. He will
turn a block of plaster into the required shape and
use it to make a master mould and two working moulds.
China
slip is poured into the mould and left for a matter
of seconds - this critical judgement is vital as the
best china is very thin and translucent. After firing,
the piece of china is glazed twice and re-fired.
The
whole process requires huge care and skill. A new shape
may need several trials before the exact conditions
are obtained - the unfired piece is very fragile, contracts
by around 14% on firing and needs to be supported in
just the right way if it is not to distort. This is
particularly crucial for pieces which have a round mouth,
where the eye would quickly detect any imperfection.
Once
the piece of white china, or glost, is in front of Steve
and Terry they can begin a design. An enormous amount
of time is spent working up the design as it has to
fit the shape - painting in 3-D is quite different to
painting a flat surface. A circular box needs four different
designs to blend together, while the inside-outside
pieces need a special perspective. The skill is all
about making the correct judgement for the piece.
Painting
miniatures is very meticulous work in itself. With china
it is even harder because the enamel paints used must
be applied thinly, so the image has to be built up in
stages (at least three), with a firing after each stage:-

The
enamel colour reacts with the glaze when it is fired
so that the image becomes a permanent thin layer of
"coloured glass". Colour changes also take
place during firing so the artist needs a lot of experience
to know how things will turn out and which colours to
apply first.
Pieces
receive a final firing after 24 carat gold (gilding)
has been applied to provide a finish to any edges.
So
Steve and Terry's beautiful masterpieces are truly works
of art that will be admired for generations to come.
It
is hard to appreciate just how much intricate work goes
into each piece.
Eric
Knowles the international ceramics expert, who knows
quality when he sees it, believes this is some of the
finest china available today. In the photo he is seen
examining Steve's prestige vase of Blue Tits called
"Safely Home". The title of the piece stems
from the scene Steve has cleverly designed for the inside
- it shows the view from the inside of a nest in a tree
hole, with one adult sitting on eggs as the other is
seen returning through the entrance hole, with the outside
world beyond. Truly incredible art!
See some
examples below or visit there site for more details.
Visit their
site here
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