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- H._V._Meyerowitz abstract "Herbert Vladimir Meyerowitz (b. 1900 St. Petersburg, d.1945 London) was an artist, educator and British colonial administrator in Africa.Meyerowitz's father was a wealthy German businessman and his mother a Russian pianist who had studied with Artur Rubenstein. At the time of the 1905 Revolution, the family moved from Russia to Switzerland, where Meyerowitz was educated at a Pestalozzi school. His education was completed in England, with holidays in Russia. The family were in Russia when war broke out in 1914 and, because of their German nationality, they were interned at Ekaterinburg. They moved to Berlin in 1916 as part of a prisoner exchange between Russia and Germany. In 1918, Meyerowitz served briefly in the German army. After the war, he returned to Berlin to study art. Together with his future wife, Eva, he developed an enthusiasm for the art of West Africa. Meyerowitz went on to study woodcarving at the Berlin Kunstgewerbeschule. He became an admirer of the educational theories of Franz CižekOn the completion of his art training, Meyerowitz moved to South Africa with his wife, where he established a reputation as a wood sculptor. He taught for five years at Cape Town University and opened a school of art.In 1935, he made a study of the crafts in Lesotho (then Basutoland), which he wrote up in A Report on the Possibilities of the Development of Village Crafts in Basutoland (Morija Printing Works, 1936). He organised an exhibition of African Arts and Crafts as part of the International Educational Conference in Salisbury, Rhodesia. He said in a speech that the traditional African art on show was "good, because it still fulfilled its purpose", but that the work brought in from the schools and institutions was "trash ... which we, in the name of education, had inflicted on the people of Africa".The Rev. H.M.Grace, the Principal of Achimota College in the Gold Coast (Ghana), offered Meyerowitz the job of arts and crafts supervisor. Achimota College had been founded in 1927 as a selective boarding school to train an African élite. It combined Western educational methods with the study of local customs, languages, biology and geography. Meyerowitz and his wife made a survey of the indigenous crafts of the Gold Coast, which they found to be in decline. At Achimota, he replaced Western-style art classes based on academic drawing with an arts and crafts approach based on local skills and traditions.From 1937, Meyerowitz began to develop a scheme for an Institute of West African Arts, Industries and Social Sciences, which would be a "marriage of the of aesthetic skill and power to modern technique". It would investigate local arts and crafts, teach certain native crafts in the light of European experience and create local craft industries. It would also investigate local history, tribal life, customs, religion and economic conditions. This scheme was approved by the West African Governors' Conference at Lagos in 1939 and the Advisory Committee on Education in 1940. Before the war, African colonies had depended on the export of commodities, which was made almost impossible by enemy shipping. The Colonial Office adopted instead a policy developing indigenous industries and eventually accepted Meyerowitz's idea. In 1943, the Institute was set up under the direction of the Rev. R.W.Stopford. Meyerowitz's colleague Michael Cardew records that only the power of Meyerowitz's "magnetic eloquence (backed up by the pressure of the war) could have persuaded the Colonial Office to support the project and the Treasury to release the necessary funds."Meyerowitz planned the Institute on the basis of production units that would combine the arts with industry. "If industries are to be established for West African needs," he argued, "the only alternative to white capital and coloured labour is a self-contained development of the kind now proposed; and the people as a whole benefit more from many local production units on a co-operative basis than from concentrated industrial centres".In 1936, on the recommendation of the English studio potter Michael Cardew, Meyerowitz appointed Harry Davis to teach pottery at Achimota and expand the pottery department to manufacture bricks, tiles, water coolers and glazed ware. The College also produced textiles. Davis resigned in 1942, and was replaced by Cardew, who undertook a large expansion of the pottery on a site at Alajo, with the aim of creating a profitable business that would meet all the pottery needs of West Africa, including that of the British Army. The pottery made continuing losses and the educated Africans who worked as apprentices found little to admire in Cardew's studio pottery approach.Grace had retired from the college in 1940, depriving Meyerowitz of a useful ally. Stopford retired in 1945. The financial losses at the Institute brought its future into question. While in London in 1945, Meyerowitz discovered that his mother, who had remained in Russia, had died in the Siege of Leningrad. He committed suicide in the same year. The inquest recorded that he had suffered from "manic depressive cyclothymia" Shortly after, the Institute was closed.".
- H._V._Meyerowitz birthDate "1900".
- H._V._Meyerowitz birthYear "1900".
- H._V._Meyerowitz deathDate "1945".
- H._V._Meyerowitz deathYear "1945".
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageID "21356617".
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageLength "6831".
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageOutDegree "31".
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageRevisionID "659635880".
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink 1905_Revolution.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Achimota.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Rubinstein.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Artur_Rubenstein.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Berlin.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Cape_Town_University.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:1900_births.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:1945_deaths.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:African_art.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:African_pottery.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:British_Jews.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:British_educators.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:South_African_Jews.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:South_African_people_of_German-Jewish_descent.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:South_African_people_of_Russian-Jewish_descent.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Colonial_Office.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Cyclothymia.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Ekaterinburg.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink First_World_War.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Franz_Cižek.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Ghana.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Harare.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Heinrich_Pestalozzi.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Kunstgewerbeschule.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Lagos.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Lesotho.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Michael_Cardew.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Revolution_of_1905.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Rhodesia.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Second_World_War.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Siege_of_Leningrad.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Studio_pottery.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Treasury.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Cape_Town.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink World_War_I.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLink Yekaterinburg.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageWikiLinkText "H. V. Meyerowitz".
- H._V._Meyerowitz dateOfBirth "1900".
- H._V._Meyerowitz dateOfDeath "1945".
- H._V._Meyerowitz hasPhotoCollection H._V._Meyerowitz.
- H._V._Meyerowitz name "Meyerowiz, H.V.".
- H._V._Meyerowitz shortDescription "British artist and colonial administrator".
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Persondata.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- H._V._Meyerowitz description "British artist and colonial administrator".
- H._V._Meyerowitz description "British artist and colonial administrator".
- H._V._Meyerowitz subject Category:1900_births.
- H._V._Meyerowitz subject Category:1945_deaths.
- H._V._Meyerowitz subject Category:African_art.
- H._V._Meyerowitz subject Category:African_pottery.
- H._V._Meyerowitz subject Category:British_Jews.
- H._V._Meyerowitz subject Category:British_educators.
- H._V._Meyerowitz subject Category:South_African_Jews.
- H._V._Meyerowitz subject Category:South_African_people_of_German-Jewish_descent.
- H._V._Meyerowitz subject Category:South_African_people_of_Russian-Jewish_descent.
- H._V._Meyerowitz hypernym Artist.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type Agent.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type Article.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type Person.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type Article.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type Educator.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type Person.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type Agent.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type NaturalPerson.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type Thing.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type Q215627.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type Q5.
- H._V._Meyerowitz type Person.
- H._V._Meyerowitz comment "Herbert Vladimir Meyerowitz (b. 1900 St. Petersburg, d.1945 London) was an artist, educator and British colonial administrator in Africa.Meyerowitz's father was a wealthy German businessman and his mother a Russian pianist who had studied with Artur Rubenstein. At the time of the 1905 Revolution, the family moved from Russia to Switzerland, where Meyerowitz was educated at a Pestalozzi school. His education was completed in England, with holidays in Russia.".
- H._V._Meyerowitz label "H. V. Meyerowitz".
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- H._V._Meyerowitz sameAs Q5628618.
- H._V._Meyerowitz sameAs Q5628618.
- H._V._Meyerowitz wasDerivedFrom H._V._Meyerowitz?oldid=659635880.
- H._V._Meyerowitz givenName "H.V.".
- H._V._Meyerowitz isPrimaryTopicOf H._V._Meyerowitz.
- H._V._Meyerowitz name "H.V. Meyerowiz".
- H._V._Meyerowitz name "Meyerowiz, H.V.".
- H._V._Meyerowitz surname "Meyerowiz".