Background
Milton Moon was born in Melbourne in 1926.
Milton Moon was born in Melbourne in 1926.
He studied painting and drawing at the Central Technical College and then privately with Margaret Cilento from 1949 to 1951.
After discharge from Navy Service in 1947 he lived first in Queensland and then in New South Wales until 1949, at which time he returned to Brisbane. He first became interested in pottery in 1950 and was taught wheel-throwing by Mervyn Feeney, a traditional potter living in Brisbane. He was also employed in broadcasting and later television from 1947 to 1962.
In 1962 he became Senior Pottery Instructor with the Department of Technical Education, Brisbane.
He represented Australia at the first World Craft Congress, Montreux, Switzerland, in 1966. In 1967-1968, he was an art tutor at the Architecture Department, University of Queensland.
In 1969 became Senior Lecturer, Head of Ceramics at the South Australian School of Artist In 1974, as a Myer Foundation Geijutsu Fellow, he lived and worked in Japan.
Twenty years later, in 1995, he relocated to Adelaide.
In 1991 he was accorded a retrospective of his work, covering a period of thirty-five years, at the Art Gallery of South Australia. In 1993 was a recipient of an Australian Artists Creative Fellowship, for a five-year period from 1994 to 1998. In 2006 he was conferred an honorary doctorate (DUniv) from the University of South Australia.
Moon served as a member of the Australia-Japan Foundation from 1976 to 1981.