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Marguerite Wildenhain : ウィキペディア英語版
Marguerite Wildenhain
Marguerite Wildenhain (October 11, 1896 – February 24, 1985), born Marguerite Friedlaender, was a Bauhaus-trained ceramic artist, educator and author. After immigrating to the United States in 1940, she taught at Pond Farm and wrote three influential books—''Pottery: Form and Expression'' (1959), ''The Invisible Core: A Potter's Life and Thoughts'' (1973), and ''…that We Look and See: An Admirer Looks at the Indians'' (1979). Artist Robert Arneson described her as "the grande dame of potters,".
==Early life==
Wildenhain was born in Lyon, France, to a German silk merchant and his English wife. She received a primary education first in Germany, then in Yorkshire England. At the start of World War I, her family moved to Germany where she completed secondary school. Beginning in 1914, she studied sculpture at the Hochschule fur Kunst in Berlin, then worked as a decorator of porcelain ware at a factory in Rudolstadt. It was at that factory where her passion for the potter's wheel ignited. When she was not working at the factory, she explored the countryside. Shortly after World War I, while in Weimar for a weekend, she happened upon the posted proclamation by architect Walter Gropius about the founding of the Bauhaus school in 1919: "“a new guild of craftsmen without the class distinctions which raise an arrogant barrier between craftsmen and artists". Then and there, as she recalled in her autobiography, she decided to become one of the first students to enroll.

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