
This plate captures a key development in Canadian design: the blending of craft and industry. The plate's black lines are irregular and asymmetrical, suggesting a hand-painted quality. This irregularity conveys the presence of the maker, making the plate appear rooted in a handcrafted tradition. Yet this impression is misleading. This plate was produced using modern, industrial methods.
The fact that the integrates both craft and industry is significant. In the early 20th century, these approaches were seen as fundamentally opposed.i Craft traditions emphasized individuality, ornament, and a direct relationship between the maker and the made.ii In contrast, industrial design prioritized efficiency, uniformity, and modernity, often distancing the object from its creator.iii
The emergence of the ceramics industry in Medicine Hat helps explain how this divide was bridged. Prior to the 20th century, Canada lacked the means to affordably produce ceramics and relied on imports from the United Kingdom, where the Arts and Crafts tradition was strong.iv An abundance of red clay and natural gas wells to power industrial manufacturing along with connection by the Canadian pacific Railway to large urban markets made Medicine Hat the perfect location for the Canadian ceramics industry to flourish.v Within the first two decades of the 20th century, modern industrial practices allowed Medicine Hat to become the centre for ceramics manufacturing in Canada, reducing reliance on British imports.vi Medicine Hat Potteries, Medalta Potteries, and the Alberta Clay Products Company all thrived in Medicine Hat.vii
Within this industrial context, the persistence of craft aesthetics becomes significant. Canadians were accustomed to the craft aesthetics of British ceramics, and in the 1930s, a broader craft revival emerged in Canada in response to mass industrialization.viii This plate reflects how industrial producers adopted the visual language of the handicrafts, such as irregularity, asymmetry, and decorative expressiveness, to appeal to craft values. As such, this plate is not simply a functional object, but evidence of a transitional moment in Canadian design, where industry and craft worked hand-in-hand.

Footnotes
i Rachel Gotlieb and Cora Golden, Design in Canada : Fifty Years from Tea Kettles to Task Chairs, 1st ed. Toronto, ON: Alfred A. Knopf Canada, 2001, 32.
ii Gotlieb and Golden, “Design in Canada,” 90.
iii Gotlieb and Golden, “Design in Canada,” 90.
iv Gotlieb and Golden, “Design in Canada,” 90.
v Banafsheh Mohammadi, “Medicine Hat Red Brick: A Tale of Extractivist Colonialism and Environmental Racism,” Journal of the Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada 49, no. 1 (2024): 30. https://doi.org/10.7202/1115134ar.
vi Gotlieb and Golden, “Design in Canada,” 90.
vii Mohammadi, “Medicine Hat,” 30.
viii Gotlieb and Golden, “Design in Canada,” 90.
ix Mohammadi, “Medicine Hat,” 29.
x Mohammadi, “Medicine Hat,” 29.
xi “Medicine Hat Clay Industries National Historic Site of Canada,” Parks Canada, accessed March 27, 2026, https://www.pc.gc.ca/apps/dfhd/page_nhs_eng.aspx?id=1905.
xii Mohammadi, “Medicine Hat,” 29.
xiii Saima Desai and Isaac Thornley, “Greenwashing the Ring of Fire: Indigenous jurisdiction and gaps in the EV battery supply chain,” Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change, York University, April 19, 2024.