
Emmanuel Cooper (1938–2012)
Author of The Sexual Perspective: Homosexuality and Art in the Last 100 Years in the West
About the Author
Emmanuel Cooper is a fellow of the Craft Potters Association and he is the long-time editor of Ceramic Review.
Works by Emmanuel Cooper
The Sexual Perspective: Homosexuality and Art in the Last 100 Years in the West (1986) 175 copies, 2 reviews
Clays and Glazes: The Ceramic Review Book of Clay Bodies and Glaze Recipes - Over 900 Recipes from Professional Potters (1988) 9 copies
Mister Number 50 1 copy
Emmanuel Cooper 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1938-12-12
- Date of death
- 2012-01-21
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Middlesex University (Ph.D|1996)
Bournemouth School of Art
Dudley College - Occupations
- studio potter
- Organizations
- Royal College of Art (visiting professor)
- Awards and honors
- Officer of the Order of the British Empire (2002)
- Relationships
- Horbury, David (husband)
- Short biography
- British studio potter, advocate for LGBT rights and writer on arts and crafts
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Pilsley, Derbyshire, England, UK
- Places of residence
- London, England, UK
- Place of death
- London, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
A very informative little book. I say that without being patronising as I have seen far bigger books that failed to inspire and were far less informative.
There is a little about the history and geology of clay, but this information is given in perspective and not as a boring space-filler as I have seen in other books.
The booklet is cram-packed with hundreds of illustrations and photographs in colour and in black & white, that often give a clear step-by-step walk-through some of the more show more challenging techniques, such as throwing a cylinder, flat dish or bowl etc.
There is also a very good section at the back on home firing using various bonfires, fire pits and improvised brick standing single use ovens; as well as the more traditional kilns.
All in all I have found this practical little booklet to be invaluable to me personally.
Definitely worth picking up! show less
There is a little about the history and geology of clay, but this information is given in perspective and not as a boring space-filler as I have seen in other books.
The booklet is cram-packed with hundreds of illustrations and photographs in colour and in black & white, that often give a clear step-by-step walk-through some of the more show more challenging techniques, such as throwing a cylinder, flat dish or bowl etc.
There is also a very good section at the back on home firing using various bonfires, fire pits and improvised brick standing single use ovens; as well as the more traditional kilns.
All in all I have found this practical little booklet to be invaluable to me personally.
Definitely worth picking up! show less
The Sexual Perspective - Homosexuality and the Last 100 Years in the West. Published 1986. ISBN 0710096356 Paperback 9" x 6" (22.6 cm x 15.2 cm)
This book has been revised and updated and republished in 1994; the review here is for the original publication of 1986. (Beware that Amazon often link different editions of a book.)
Emanuel Cooper provides a survey of the work of many artists who according to the book cover "were or are homosexual, or had significant homosexual experiences". Although show more concentrating on the last 100 years by way of introduction he looks back to the Renaissance. He considers such aspects as sexual aesthesis, the sexual code, and looks at influences such as the Greeks, and at changing legal and social attitudes. In his discussions Cooper considers both the lives of the artists and their work. The book includes notes and an index but there is no bibliography.
The list of artists includes: Donatello, Botticelli, da Vinci, Michelangelo, Caravaggio, John Singer Sargent, Thomas Eakins, Winslow Homer, Gustave Moreau, Aubrey Beardsley, Gwen John, Charles Demuth, Marsden Hartley, Jean Cocteau, Christopher Wood, Duncan Grant, Tamara de Lempicka, Edward Burra, Paul Cadmus, John Minton, Keith Vaughan, Francis Bacon, Quaintance, Andy Warhol, Michael Leonard, Philip Core, Delmas Howe, Gilbert and George and many more.
The book is illustrated throughout with 130 monochrome images. It is a serious consideration of the subject; the survey covers a wide range including a few sculptors, photographers such as Mapplethorpe as well as those one might consider illustrators such as Tom of Finland. It also includes some such as Henry Scott Tuke who not all would agree fit the stated aims of the book, scholars of Tuke questioning any homosexual inclinations. Some may question on similar grounds the inclusion of other artists here, but that in no way devalues their art. Yet there is no mention of Fairfield Porter, who while married carried on a long term relationship with poet James Schuyler. There are a couple of chapters on lesbian art (the revised 1994 edition expands on this and also includes responses to AIDS).
To describe this book as the publishers do as "lavishingly and seductively illustrated" is something of an exaggeration, the pictures can at best described as informative and the rarity value of some makes them worthwhile, but the book is not large in format and few of the images attain to full page, and many of them in monochrome appear decidedly dull. But they are enough maybe to encourage the reader to search out decent reproductions. show less
This book has been revised and updated and republished in 1994; the review here is for the original publication of 1986. (Beware that Amazon often link different editions of a book.)
Emanuel Cooper provides a survey of the work of many artists who according to the book cover "were or are homosexual, or had significant homosexual experiences". Although show more concentrating on the last 100 years by way of introduction he looks back to the Renaissance. He considers such aspects as sexual aesthesis, the sexual code, and looks at influences such as the Greeks, and at changing legal and social attitudes. In his discussions Cooper considers both the lives of the artists and their work. The book includes notes and an index but there is no bibliography.
The list of artists includes: Donatello, Botticelli, da Vinci, Michelangelo, Caravaggio, John Singer Sargent, Thomas Eakins, Winslow Homer, Gustave Moreau, Aubrey Beardsley, Gwen John, Charles Demuth, Marsden Hartley, Jean Cocteau, Christopher Wood, Duncan Grant, Tamara de Lempicka, Edward Burra, Paul Cadmus, John Minton, Keith Vaughan, Francis Bacon, Quaintance, Andy Warhol, Michael Leonard, Philip Core, Delmas Howe, Gilbert and George and many more.
The book is illustrated throughout with 130 monochrome images. It is a serious consideration of the subject; the survey covers a wide range including a few sculptors, photographers such as Mapplethorpe as well as those one might consider illustrators such as Tom of Finland. It also includes some such as Henry Scott Tuke who not all would agree fit the stated aims of the book, scholars of Tuke questioning any homosexual inclinations. Some may question on similar grounds the inclusion of other artists here, but that in no way devalues their art. Yet there is no mention of Fairfield Porter, who while married carried on a long term relationship with poet James Schuyler. There are a couple of chapters on lesbian art (the revised 1994 edition expands on this and also includes responses to AIDS).
To describe this book as the publishers do as "lavishingly and seductively illustrated" is something of an exaggeration, the pictures can at best described as informative and the rarity value of some makes them worthwhile, but the book is not large in format and few of the images attain to full page, and many of them in monochrome appear decidedly dull. But they are enough maybe to encourage the reader to search out decent reproductions. show less
Consulted for research purposes: information on kiln development helpful, although not as complete as I was hoping for.
The text is somewhat disappointing, lacking insight :-(
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 38
- Members
- 602
- Popularity
- #41,740
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 67
- Languages
- 2




