Baker taught stained glass at the Central School of Arts and Crafts from 1951,[2] where in 1953-54 he ran the stained glass department with Tom Fair,[3] and his pupils included Robert Sowers and Margaret Traherne.[4] From 1963 he taught at Kingston College of Art.[5]
1959, Broomfield Chapel, Abbots Langley: two large abstract windows[1]
1959, Austin Reed, Regent Street, London: six glass and aluminium panels
1960, Our Lady, St Mary of Walsingham, London Colney: 10 large concrete and glass windows
1960, St George, Britwell: Tree of Jesse[10][11][1] (The 1960 church was replaced in the early 2000s, but some of the side panels of the Jesse window are incorporated in the new church.)[12]
From 1960 to 1965, Baker created a number of dalle de verre windows in churches and chapels, setting slab glass in concrete or resin: Our Lady, St Mary of Walsingham, London Colney (1960); St George, Britwell (1964); Holy Cross Church, Gleadless Valley (1964); St Michaels Convent, Finchley (1965).
Publications
'Secular stained glass', The Architectural Association Journal, December 1955, p.120
English Stained Glass with an introduction by Herbert Read and photographs by Alfred Lammer, Thames & Hudson, London, 1960
English Stained Glass of the Medieval Period (revised edition of the above), Thames & Hudson, London, 1978
References
^ abcdefgh"News: John 'Jack' Baker". Vidimus: The Only Online Magazine Devoted to Medieval Stained Glass (15). February 2008. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
^Carden, Andrew (February 1956). "Exhibition of stained glass". The Architectural Association Journal: 187.
^'8-sided church cost £28,000'. The Daily Telegraph. 13 March 1958. 'Two of the six altar windows are of stained glass in purple, designed by Mr John Baker.'
^Ward, Sasha (27 July 2021). "East Wittering and Earnley churches / July 27, 2021". Retrieved 29 February 2024. The small lower windows throughout the church are filled with a complete set of stained glass windows, contemporary with the church, by John Baker.
^"St Mary's Church, Ide Hill, Kent". John E. Vigar's Kent Churches. Retrieved 10 November 2022. The original east window was destroyed in the Second World War and was replaced in 1946 by a colourful modern design of the Nativity by John Baker.