Background
Charlotte Rhead was born into an artistic family. Her father Frederick Alfred Rhead began his career as an apprentice at Mintons where he learnt the art of pâte-sur-pâte ceramic decoration from Marc-Louis Solon.
Charlotte Rhead was born into an artistic family. Her father Frederick Alfred Rhead began his career as an apprentice at Mintons where he learnt the art of pâte-sur-pâte ceramic decoration from Marc-Louis Solon.
At the beginning of the twentieth century the Rhead family was living in Fenton where Charlotte and her sister Dollie studied at Fenton School of Artist
Frederick A. Rhead went on to work at a number of potteries including a failed venture of his own. Charlotte"s mother Adolphine (née Hurten) also came from an artistic family. Charlotte"s elder brother, Frederick Hurten Rhead, became a well-known pottery designer in the United States of America. Charlotte did not stay at the firm long but it gave her the opportunity to develop her skills as a tubeliner, which would be useful to her in her future career as a designer.
In 1905 Charlotte found employment as an enameller at Keeling & Company of Burslem.
She was next employed as a designer at a tile-maker, T & R Boote. Charlotte joined him there, taking charge of the tubeliners, and later working as a designer.
Charlotte is perhaps best known for her association with Burgess and Leigh of Middleport, where she worked as a designer from 1926 until 1931. (Their factory is still operating, as at 2014, as the Burleigh Pottery).
In the 1930s she moved to the firm of AG Richardson in Tunstall.
Their brand name was Crown Ducal. Rhead is noted for her cheerful tubelined designs. Her style was more traditional than that of Clarice Cliff and Susie Cooper, her contemporaries.
Rhead"s ware was popular in her lifetime, and continues to fetch moderate prices at auction.
Jessie Tait, another prolific ceramic designer, worked for Charlotte Rhead. The leading authority on the Rhead family was Bernard Bumpus (1921–2004) who curated an exhibition about the Rhead family, Rhead Artists and Potters, which toured various United Kingdom museums in the 1980s.
Bumpus"s publications include Charlotte Rhead: Potter and Designer, 1987. In 1985 Rhead, Clarice Cliff, and Susie Cooper were the subject of Pottery Ladies, a series of television documentaries made for Channel 4 with the support of the Arts Council of Great Britain.
Susie Cooper was the only one of the three who was still alive by this time, but one of the 25-minute programmes includes interviews with paintresses and tubeliners who worked with Rhead.