The first trade show was a gamble that nearly broke the factory. The traditionalists laughed. They called the work "garish" and "clumsy." But then, a young woman from London stopped in her tracks. She picked up a conical sifter painted with bright red circles and black lines. "It looks like music," the woman whispered.
They became the "Bizarre Girls." Under Clarice’s direction, the "Colour Room" became a laboratory of rebellion. They threw out the delicate brushes and used bold, thick strokes. They ignored the drab pastels of the Victorian era and embraced the screaming neons of the Jazz Age. The Colour Room
She recruited a team of young women, girls who had spent their lives being told to stay within the lines. "In this room," Clarice told them, her voice echoing off the kiln-dried walls, "we don't paint for the past. We paint for the woman who wants her breakfast table to look like a sunrise." The first trade show was a gamble that
Clarice was a "lithographer" at the A.J. Wilkinson factory, a job that required precision but offered no room for soul. While the other girls gossiped over tea about suitors and silk stockings, Clarice spent her lunch breaks staring at "seconds"—the broken, rejected pots piled in the yard like white bones. To the masters of the factory, they were trash. To Clarice, they were blank canvases waiting for a revolution. She picked up a conical sifter painted with