OPENING RECEPTION
January 9th, 2026
6-8pm
ABOUT THE EXHIBITION
HB381 is pleased to announceĀ One Way or Another, a two-person exhibition of new ceramic works by Paul Scott (b. 1953, United Kingdom) and Caroline Slotte (b. 1975, Finland). Slotte studied ceramics with Scott when he was a professor at the Bergen Academy of Art and Design in the early 2000s and their practices have dovetailed in various ways since. Both artists invoke the storied space of European porcelain and faience wares as a repository of cultural mores and readymade imagery. Collectively, they draw on the history of objects as an apt framework for parsing psychological and political affairs of the present day. While their techniques for altering these historic objects find different expressions, their attention to this space of visual and material culture is equally acute, feeding into discourses on craft and cultural studies and museological concerns around heritage and preservation.
Scott resides in the UK in the county of Cumbria, from where he pulls his moniker and frequent title āCumbrian Blue(s),ā a phrase which is stamped or painted onto the verso of many of his pieces. With a diverse practice and an international reputation, he is known for his blue-and-white ceramics that address current events with a historical through line, blurring the boundaries between fine art, craft, and design. Over time, his practice has become closely tied to his own research into printed vitreous surfaces as he has developed an extraordinary expertise on the intricacies of porcelain and transferware production. The innumerable pieces of vintage pottery that have passed through his hands lent him an intimate awareness of the life of objects and their journeys.
āI habitually collect glazed tableware from eBay, junk and antique shops,ā Scott writes. āSome of it has crazed glazing, some may be cracked, chipped, or the gold lustre worn from the edges ⦠over time I have grown very fond of these imperfections. Some are simply beautiful in their own right, as cracks trace a line across a form, or blooms in the glaze create vitreous clouds in the glassy surface.ā In part, it is the care shown for humble objects in connection with his astute political commentary which makes Scottās work feel so arresting and truthful. His approach is fundamentally concerned with the reanimation of familiar objects, landscape, pattern, and a sense of place. Works from hisĀ New American SceneryĀ series likeĀ TollĀ andĀ Residual Waste (Texas)Ā update the picturesque tradition of landscape with scenes of smokestacks, semi-trucks, and toll roads, turning attention to our asphalt and blacktop-tinged treatment of the land.Ā Cloud Studies (after Thomas Cole & Eadweard Muybridge)Ā inserts the profile of a passenger airplane overtop the billowing outlines of drifting clouds, referencing two image makers who helped to define the aesthetic of the U.S. American landscape.
Meanwhile, Slotte brings a more minimalist approach to the treatment of antique plates and china tableware, subtracting matter to render intricate, sandblasted lines and ghostly tracings. Her delicate yet densely-layered patterns interrupt the material coherence of these common objects, revealing moments of absence, ambiguity, and blankness. These acts of redaction, which design historian Glenn Adamson refers to as āa strange sort of craft, consisting as it does almost entirely in deletion,ā underscore the curious nature of mass-produced decorative objects; by taking away layers of glaze and clay, Slotte draws our attention to their stylized forms and materiality. Each of her scenes, as though sculpted by erosion, becomes a uniquely altered variation on the theme. In doing so, her artworks broaden our attention to address questions of cultural association, material memory, and the inevitable losses and transformations of time.
āOn one level, these works speak to the partial and elusive nature of collective memory,ā Adamson writes, āwhich might be defined as that which is left behind, when all else is forgotten. Yet Slotteās painstaking act of erasure can also be read as deeply personal. The titleĀ Going Blank AgainĀ is a short story in three words, which strikes right to the heart of anyone whoās ever been at a loss. And who hasnāt?ā
Slotteās lyrical interventions into the surfaces of blue-and-white transferware mark her subjects through acts of selection and deletion. Vaporous landscapes, clarified from the now classical scenes of the porcelain tradition, emerge out of porous accumulations of pixel-like spheres akin to halftone dots. The Blue Willow and Wild Rose patterns are prominent, but there are others likeĀ J. Jamieson & Co.ās Bosphorus Blue, depicting attenuated minarets lining the Bosphorus Strait, and numerous scenes that evoke far-flung travel vistas and locales. Slotteās alterations to the originals unsettle and transform their mass-produced subjects, changing our experience of longing and wanderlust into something more reflective, opaque, and uncertain.
The instability of these images operates like a secondhand memory: the familiar pattern so often repeated becomes beautifully and thoughtfully transmuted into something unfamiliar. Rippling azure spheres of sky crossed by wispy clouds ricochet across the surfaces of plates and platters in herĀ American SkiesĀ series. The artistās technique enacts something akin to a disappearing act; by carefully masking the surface of each plate, then sandblasting what remains, she effaces certain details while bringing others to the fore. Under her hand, enigmatic forms are scoured into the clay body underlying historic plates and platters, calling our attention back to the physical matter of ceramics and glaze: its permeable and rough textures, its opalescent gloss and vitreous liquidity, the light staining and appearance of imperfect yet entirely natural marks of age, use, and individuality.
As Adamson asserts, āTogether, [Scott and Slotte] show how art can open up an apparently inconsequential domain of material culture, showing it to be far more expansive than one could have imagined.ā Indeed, the carefully-cropped and edited views of city, sky, and countryside featured in the two artistsā work are capacious and unexpected, revealing a commentary on landscape that is at once incisive, fragmented, and hypnotic.
One Way or AnotherĀ is presented in collaboration with Ferrin Contemporary.
INSTALLATION PHOTOS
WORKS BY PAUL SCOTT
WORKS BY CAROLINE SLOTTE
EXHIBITION CATALOG
PAUL SCOTT & CAROLINE SLOTTE: One Way or Another
With essay by Glenn Adamson
January 2026
Paul Scott & Caroline Slotte: One Way or AnotherĀ is a catalogue published by Hostler Burrows on the occasion of the artistsā exhibition at HB381.
Softcover (embossed, matte finish)
48 pages
10ā³ x 8ā³
January 2026
With an essay by Glenn Adamson
Photography byĀ Chikako Harada, Caroline Slotte, Ćystein Klakegg (p.4),
Joakim Bergstrƶm (p.10), John Polak, & Paul Scott
Catalogue Design by LevievanderMeer, Amsterdam
Printing by robstolkĀ®, Amsterdam
PROGRAMMING
OPENING RECEPTION
January 9th, 2026
6-8pm EST
Join HB381 for the opening of One Way or Another featuring Paul Scott and Caroline Slotte. This event is free and open to the public.
The American Ceramic Circle Presents:
ARTIST TALK with Caroline Slotte featured in “One Way or Another” at HB381
January 22nd, 1pm to 2:30pm EST
HB381
381 Broadway
New York, NY 10013
Overview
PRESS
Paul Scott on Yale University Radio
Brainard Carey Interviews Paul Scott for Yale University Radio
WYBC, Yale University, January 23, 2026
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
English, b. 1953,Ā Darley Dale, Derbyshire, England
lives and works in Cumbria, UK
Paul Scott is a Cumbrian-based artist with a diverse practice and an international reputation. Creating individual pieces that blur the boundaries between fine art, craft and design, he is well known for research into printed vitreous surfaces, as well as his characteristic blue and white artworks in glazed ceramic.
Scottās artworks can be found in public collections around the globe ā including The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design Norway, the Victoria and Albert Museum London, National Museums Liverpool, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh and Brooklyn Art Museum USA. Commissioned work can be found in a number of UK museums as well as public places in the North of England, including Carlisle, Maryport, Gateshead and Newcastle Upon Tyne. He has also completed large-scale works in Hanoi, Vietnam and GuldagergĆ„rd public sculpture park in Denmark.
A combination of rigorous research, studio practice, curation, writing and commissioned work ensures that his work is continually developing. It is fundamentally concerned with the re-animation of familiar objects, landscape, pattern and a sense of place. He was Professor of Ceramics at Oslo National Academy of the Arts (KHiO) from 2011ā2018. Scott received his Bachelors of Art Education and Design at Saint Martinās College and Ph.d at the Manchester Institute for Research and Innovation in Art and Design in Manchester, England.
His current research project New American Scenery has been enabled by an Alturas Foundation artist award, Ferrin Contemporary, and funding from Arts Council England. More on New American Scenery,Ā here.
b. 1975 Helsinki, Finland
lives and works in Helsinki, Finland
Caroline Slotte holds an MA in Ceramics from Bergen Academy of Art and Design, Norway, in addition to education from Denmark and Finland. From 2007 to 2011 Slotte was a research fellow in the Norwegian Artistic Research Fellowship Programme. Affiliated with Bergen Academy of Art and Design, Dept of Specialised Art, she was also a member of the interdisciplinary research project Creating Art Value, funded by the Research Council of Norway.
The reworking of second hand objects play a pivotal role in Caroline Slotte“s practice. She manipulates found materials, primarily ceramic everyday items, so that they take on new meanings. The tensions between the recognizable and the enigmatic, the ordinary and the unexpected are recurring thematic concerns. More recent explorations reveal an expanded interest in material perception and material recognition, teasing out situations where the initial visual identification fails resulting in an unsettling state of material confusion. Demonstrating an engaged sensitivity towards the associations, memories and narratives inherent in the objects, Slotte“s intricate physical interventions allows us to see things we would otherwise not have seen.
Slotte“s works have been exhibited internationally and acquired by, among others, the Museum of Arts and Design in New York, the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, Röhsska Museum in Gothenburg, the Design Museum in Helsinki and the Museum of Decorative Arts in Oslo.

































