Emmanuel Cooper
From LGBT Archive
Revision as of 22:51, 30 December 2013 by Ross Burgess (Talk | contribs)
Emmanuel Cooper (1938–2012) was a British potter, author, and one of the founders of the Gay Left Collective.
For almost 20 years Cooper focused on creating tableware for London restaurants. When the handmade look in ceramics lost popularity in the 1980s, he decided to give up series production and concentrate on the individual pieces for which he is now best known.
Cooper was the art critic of Gay News for 10 years. He contributed articles to many magazines and journals, and was a frequent broadcaster for the BBC. He sat on the boards of several arts organisations and was a member of the Arts Council of Great Britain.
In the late 1960s and 1970s, Cooper played an active role in the Gay Liberation Front and was a founder member of the Gay Left Collective. Sexual and gender politics were to remain among his dominant concerns.
Bibliography
- A History of Pottery
- Ten Thousand Years of Pottery
- The Potter’s Book of Glaze Recipes
- Biographies of Bernard Leach and Lucy Rie.
- Monographs for Gay Men’s Press on the photographers Baron von Gloeden and Arthur Tress, and the painter Henry Scott Tuke.
- Fully Exposed
- Male Bodies
- The Sexual Perspective, first published 1986.