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Reginald George Haggar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Reginald George Haggar (1905–1988), R.I., A.R.C.A., F.R.S.A., was a British ceramic designer. He was born in Ipswich and studied at the Ipswich School of Art and the Royal College of Art. In 1929, he became an assistant designer at Mintons Pottery in Stoke-on-Trent, rising to art director six months later, a post he held until 1939. Working in watercolors and ceramics, his designs reflected both the radical and lyrical elements of the Art Deco style.

After leaving Mintons, he became master-in-charge of the Stoke School of Art in 1941 and then of the Burslem School of Art until 1945.

Thereafter, he was a freelance artist and lecturer in the Potteries area. He painted many pictures of the North Staffordshire area. An annual ceramics lecture has been held in his memory each year called the Reginald Haggar Memorial Lecture, given these days at The Potteries Museum & Art Gallery.[1]

Publications

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  • Recent ceramic sculpture in Great Britain, J. Tiranti ltd, 1946
  • English Pottery Figures, 1660-1860, J. Tiranti (printed by Barnard & Westwood), 1947
  • A new guide to old pottery: English country pottery, M. M. McBride, 1950
  • English Country Pottery, Phoenix House, 1950
  • The Masons of Lane Delph and the origin of Masons patent ironstone, Printed for G.L. Ashworth & Bros. by P.L. Humphries, 1952
  • Staffordshire chimney ornaments, Phoenix House, 1955
  • Pottery Through the Ages, Roy Publishers, 1959
  • Sculpture through the ages, London: Methuen, 1960
  • Glass and glassmakers, London: Methuen, 1961
  • A dictionary of art terms: painting, sculpture, architecture, Oldbourne Press, 1962
  • The Concise Encyclopedia of Continental Pottery and Porcelain, Praeger, 1968
  • with Elizabeth Adams, Mason porcelain and ironstone 1796-1853, Miles Mason and the Mason Manufactories, London: Faber, 1977

See also

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References

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