- Source: Phoebe Stabler
Phoebe Gertrude Stabler (née McLeish, 1879–1955) was an English artist working across many mediums including metalwork, pottery, enamel and wood in the late nineteenth and early-mid twentieth centuries. "Although Stabler is best known for her pottery figures, during the 1920s and 1930s she was also well known for her stone carvings and was an important contributor to the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley, 1924."
Biography
Stabler was born in Birmingham, but grew up in Liverpool, where both her parents originated. Stabler was one of five or more children, with her two sisters also following creative careers as jewellery designers. Stabler first studied at the Liverpool School of Art in the 1890s, where two of her sisters also attended. During this time she was awarded the City Scholarship and Travelling Scholarship. She went on to study at the Royal College of Art in London.
Artwork
In 1906, she married Harold Stabler. From 1912, Stabler and her husband, had a kiln in Hammersmith, London, where they worked collaboratively as well as Stabler producing garden ornaments. She created richly glazed pottery figures which were produced by both the Royal Worcester and Royal Doulton and Poole Pottery. For Poole Pottery, she collaborated with her husband to design the ceramics for The Cenotaph in Durban. Stabler also designed works for Ashtead Potters, a pottery that employed ex-servicemen after the First World War.
Stabler created the World's Land-Speed Trophy that was awarded to Sir Henry Segrave.
In 2018, The Light of Knowledge (1927) ceramic tile panel was put on display at the Rugby Art Gallery & Museum following a fundraising effort to have it restored.
Selected exhibitions
Stabler's work was exhibited widely, including at the following institutes,
Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts
Society of Women Artists
Royal Academy of Arts
New Society of Artists
Walker Art Gallery
Women's International Art Club
Sir John Cass Arts and Crafts Society
Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society
British Institute of Industrial Art
Works held in Collections
References
External links
7 artworks by or after Phoebe Stabler at the Art UK site
A short video showing Phoebe Stabler at work
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Phoebe Stabler
- List of Royal Doulton figurines
- Poole Pottery
- Stabler (surname)
- Ashtead potters
- The Cenotaph, Durban
- Phoebe Barnard
- Susie Porter
- John Lennon Art and Design Building
- Harold Stabler
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