In Praise of Ravilious
Painter, printmaker and designer Angie Lewin talks about the inspiration provided by Eric Ravilious’ ceramic designs for Wedgwood.
Angie Lewin ‘The 1937 Coronation Mug’ linocut
It was finding an Eric Ravilious 1937 coronation mug that started my collection of his designs for Wedgwood. Both he and Edward Bawden, whose work I discovered just days after leaving Central School of Art and Design, had become important influences on how I approached my own work. While studying fine art printmaking at college, I took on my first illustration commission and enjoyed working on this collaborative project while creating my own prints and drawings. The work of Ravilious and Bawden was an exciting revelation to me, as their personal and commercial pieces seemed so seamlessly intertwined, and every illustration or design for ceramics or wallpaper was so recognisably their own.
It was the inventive way they approached their illustration and design work that gave me such pleasure. I came to realise that a significant reason for this was that, as artist-printmakers in the pre-digital age, they also understood how commercial print worked. They physically cut lino blocks, engraved woodblocks and drew on lithographic stones – and these skills were invaluable in creating artwork that exploited the potential of the print process with such imagination and assurance. Their ability to explore the possibilities of working in one or two colours by contrasting black line with areas of white line out of black, balancing different weights of line and creating interesting tones through a variety of engraved and drawn textures (an integral part of lino cutting and wood engraving), resulted in bold, graphic work.
For me, the designs that Ravilious created for Wedgwood are a perfect example of collaboration between an artist and industry. His original artwork was subsequently engraved onto copperplate by skilled craftspeople at Wedgwood to create the paper transfers, which would be fired onto the china. The vignettes and borders applied to plates, mugs, and coffee pots retain the subtle tone and fine line of his wood-engraved vignettes and lithographs. The looping border of his ‘Persephone’ design and the twist motif created for ‘Garden’, each laid on a softly shaded band of colour, are unmistakably Ravilious. His original drawings for designs, sometimes incorporating collaged wood-engraved motifs and with areas cut away or patched over, reveal his thought processes.
Angie Lewin’s wood engraving ‘Alphabet and Feathers’
The artist’s 1937 coronation mug with its frieze of fireworks, which Ravilious loved, above his signature lively lettering and numerals, immediately caught my eye in a Norfolk shop. The textured treatment of the royal coat of arms laid across a clear band of blue with splashes of soft yellow behind the showers of fiery sparks creates a joyful object. I gradually added to my collection over the years: first, a few ‘Persephone’ plates, followed by a shallow soup bowl and then the coffee pot and cups. One Christmas morning, I unwrapped his blue striped ‘Alphabet’ mug, the lettering associating perfectly with the illustrations. Each tiny vignette is eccentrically engaging and self-contained, including Y and Z (for yacht and zeppelin), waiting to be discovered inside the mug.
My Ravilious pieces sit in a collection of ceramics of all types and in varying conditions, some very chipped and cracked, at home and in my studio. Stuffed with seed heads and feathers, initially as a haphazard form of storage for those elements I’ve collected on walks and sketching trips, I began to include these ceramics in my still-life compositions. Often, the surface-pattern decoration flows off the jug or cup into the background to mingle with the real seed heads and feathers contained within.
Their inclusion references how important Ravilious’ work is to me, but it may also reflect on how an early visit to Cambridge had a life-changing influence. While still at school in the early 1980s, I was wandering around the city with a friend when I happened to pass by Kettle’s Yard. On a whim, we decided to ring the doorbell, with no idea what might be inside. Discovering Jim Ede’s home, where art, domestic objects, books, plants , and natural objects were displayed together, was a revelation for us both. Everything was clearly chosen and placed with great care and consideration, but it also seemed so simply and instinctively right. Here, a seed head or pebble is given the same prominence as a Ben Nicholson relief or a Henri Gaudier-Brzeska sculpture.
Although many of my Ravilious ceramics are now safely placed out of harm’s way, most were designed for daily use. Drinking from a beautifully crafted cup or mug adds to the enjoyment of the every day – and I’ll always be uplifted by a meal eaten from a ‘Persephone’ plate.
Find out more about Angie Lewin’s limited edition prints and view our current selection of original 1938 Eric Ravilious lithographs.
Inspired by Ravilious
Here’s a selection of original watercolours and limited edition prints by Angie Lewin, inspired by her collection of Eric Ravilious ceramics.
If you’d like to find out more about Angie’s work, you might like to visit Angie’s website.