ABOUT MARC & DIANE
In 1981 the British Crafts Council staged a fascinating exhibition entitled The Maker’s Eye. The premise was simple: a range of contemporary craft artists chose works by their peers, presenting the objects in carefully arranged groups. It was an exercise in sensibility. One of the artist-curators included was the potter and writer Alison Britton. Of her selection, she said this: “I would like to make a comparison evident between ‘prose’ objects and ‘poetic’ objects; those that are mainly active and those that are mainly contemplative. To me the most moving things are the ones where I experience in looking at them a frisson from both these aspects at once, from both prose and poetry, purpose and commentary. These have what I call a double presence.”
As it happens, 1981 marks an early stage in the formation of the Grainer collection. Several years prior, Marc Grainer had begun going regularly to London on business trips, which quickly became buying trips as well. His initial focus was on ceramics, which was not then the highly valued art medium it is today (he recalls bringing many of his early acquisitions home in carry-on luggage). The UK was a particularly open field. The number of active collectors there was comparatively small, and the average consumer of “studio pottery” remained wedded to a traditionalist aesthetic, associated with the influential Bernard Leach and his disciples.
Grainer was one of very few Americans to realize that something new and exciting was happening in British ceramics. (Another was John Driscoll, who developed a scholarly collection of the Leach school, as well as more contemporary makers). The origins of this creative vitality can be located in the 1960s, with the work of European émigrés Hans Coper, Ruth Duckworth, and preeminently, the Viennese-trained modernist Lucie Rie.
Their turn away from the past, toward abstraction, paved the way for an extraordinary golden generation of ceramists who arrived on the scene in the 1970s. Among the leading protagonists, in addition to Britton herself, were Gordon Baldwin, whose explorations of the vessel indicate its huge potential as an arena of experimentation; John Ward, who creates lucid compositions with precisely delineated geometric surfaces; and Richard Slee, a wickedly funny satirist with an unerring sense of plastic form.
Soon it was clear to both Marc and Diane Grainer that they were in deep—and that British ceramics was not the only field they wanted to explore. They became involved in the institutional infrastructure of the craft movement in the USA, taking up various leadership roles with the James Renwick Alliance (a support group of the Renwick Gallery) in their home city, Washington DC, as well as the American Craft Museum (now the Museum of Arts and Design) in New York, and the American Craft Council. In 2010 they made a major gift of British ceramics to the Mint Museum of Art. In many respects they have been exemplary of another golden generation, of motivated craft collectors who also became institution-builders.
All the while the Grainers’ collecting kept pace, with the synthesis that Britton described—prose and poetry, expression and functional allusion—always evident. They continued their early involvement with ceramics, acquiring not only figures based in the UK, such as Nicholas Rena and Lawson Oyekan, but also luminaries of the American scene, such as the post-Pop trompe l’œil magician Richard Shaw. They also developed an interest in the brilliant Californian enamellist June Schwarcz, whose modest yet mighty works bear comparison with the best Abstract Expressionist sculpture. Gradually, they shifted up a few gears, not just living with pots but acquiring and commissioning major works of sculpture, lighting, and furniture, giving shape to a totally creative, hand-crafted environment.
Today, as ceramics and limited-edition furniture achieve unprecedented levels of interest, it’s important to retain a sense of recent history. Artists who are newly gravitating to these disciplines could learn a lot from the previous generation. Witness the important Judy Kensley McKie Monkey Settee offered here, featuring an unusual combination of carved walnut and cast bronze, and the artist’s customary mastery of line.
Or Britton’s Pale Double Pot of 1995, which could almost have been made as an explicit manifestation of her principle of “double presence.” Composed of two contrasting yet conjoined volumes, the object calls to mind a pair of dancers in motion, with the kinetic energy enhanced by deft swirls of slip on the surface. The interior volumes have equal interest to the exterior, and their mutual encounter is articulated by a flattened lip that courses complicatedly, stepwise, around the whole pot. While only 19 inches high, it’s a majestic thing—a miniature monument to its own intuitive making.
Marc and Diane Grainer were exceptional in realizing the value of works like this when they were first made. With the benefit of hindsight, their greatness is self-evident; but sometimes that clarity takes time. For, as Britton put it on another occasion, “things must come first, that is what it is about.”
–Glenn Adamson
New York, June, 2019
SELECT ARTWORK AVAILABLE TO ACQUIRE
Works by multiple artists are available for sale or acquisition from The Marc & Diane Collection.
Akio Takamori
“Lovers Teapot”
circa 1991
porcelain
11 x 8.5 x 8″
Akio Takamori
“Man & Woman Teapot”
circa 1991
porcelain
9 x 9″
GIFTED TO INSTITUTIONS
Works by multiple artists were offered as gifts or donations to Public Institutions and Museums from The Marc & Diane Grainer Collection.
Wesley Anderegg
“Eating Man Teapot”
1996
earthenware
7.5 x 10.5 x 4″
Gift of the Marc & Diane Grainer Collection to The Clay Studio to the Scholarship Fund, Philadelphia, PA.
Dan Anderson
“Woodfired Teapot”
1982
stoneware
7.5 x 10.5 x 4″
Gift of the Marc & Diane Grainer Collection to Figge Art Museum, 2025
Kate Blacklock
“Fall”
2002
porcelain and oils
17.5 x 15 x 14″
Gift of the Marc & Diane Grainer Collection to the Everson Museum of Art, 2025
Edward Eberle
“Dreams of the Gleaner”
1997
large lidded porcelain with terra sigillata
17.5 x 14.5 x 14.5″
Gift of the Marc & Diane Grainer Collection to the Everson Museum of Art, 2025
Connie Kiener
“Book of Knowledge”
2001
hand-built ceramic
13 x 8 x 8″
Gift of the Marc & Diane Grainer Collection to Figge Art Museum, 2025
Allan Rosenbaum
“Thinking Chair”
1998
earthenware, stain, glaze
18 x 19 x 14″
Gift of the Marc & Diane Grainer Collection to The Clay Studio to the Scholarship Fund, Philadelphia, PA.
Dirk Staschke
“Anonym 9″
2003
ceramic
22 x 9 x 7”
Gift of the Marc & Diane Grainer Collection to Figge Art Museum, 2025
Jason Walker
“Los Comunicadores”
2006
porcelain, underglazes, wire and cement
30 x 18 x 18″
Gift of the Marc & Diane Grainer Collection to the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, 2025
Kurt Weiser
“Flower Pot 2″
china-painted porcelain
10.5 x 11 x 4.5”
Gift of the March & Diane Grainer Collection to the Everson Museum of Art, 2025
Red Weldon Sandlin
“Naughty Heart of Pine”
2007
ceramic
6 x 8.75 x 6″
Gift of the Marc & Diane Grainer Collection to The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum & Art Gallery at Skidmore College, 2025.36.2
Matthew Wilt
“FUNNEL”
1998
ceramic
12 x 15 x 15”
Gift of the March & Diane Grainer Collection to The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum & Art Gallery at Skidmore College, 2025.36.3
SUPPORTED INSTITUTIONS
The Marc & Diane Grainer Collection gifted numerous works to institutions across the US.
OFFERED FOR AUCTION | MAAK LONDON
In 2025, the auction house, Maak, presented a significant group of works from the extraordinary collection of Marc and Diane Grainer, respected patrons and passionate collectors of Contemporary Ceramics and Craft.
These works were offered as part of Maak’s two parallel auctions dedicated to Contemporary Ceramics and Contemporary Craft, presented alongside other important pieces from a range of distinguished collections. Together, these sales offered collectors a rare opportunity to acquire exceptional works from some of the most celebrated ceramic and craft artists.
The photos featured below are merely a featured selection of the works offered by MAAK.
GRAINER HOME | POTOMAC, MD
During their work with the Grainers, MAAK London photographed the home and collection as it stood on any given day. The photos illustrate the care and attention Marc and Diane gave to curating each piece, from ceramics to furniture.
All photos courtesy of MAAK London, Kent Pell Photography.
ARTISTS IN THE COLLECTION
Wesley Anderegg
Beate Anderson
Dan Anderson
Harry Anderson
Adrian Arleo
Robert Arneson
Ralph Bacerra
Lidya Buzio
Fred Baier
Pierre Bayle
Bennett Bean
Susan Beiner
Stella Benjamin
Stephen Bird
Kate Blacklock
Tord Boontje
Christian Boudette
Clive Bowen
Stephen Bowers
Steven Bradford
Robert Brady
Archie Brennan
Jon Brooks
Neil Brownsword
Andy Buck
Mark Burns
Lydia Buzio
Nancy Carman
Wendell Castle
Marek Cecula
John Cederquist
Paul Chaleff
Claude Champy
Jim Cole
Linda Cordell
Philip Cornelius
Lies Cosijn
Victoria P. Crowell
Claire Curneen
Val Cushing
Wouter Dam
Janet DeBoos
Harris Deller
Kim Dickey
James Richard (Rick) Dillingham
Paul A. Dresang
Pippin Drysdale
Ruth Duckworth
Jack Earl
Edward Eberle
Kathy Erteman
Laura Foster Nicholson
Leopold L. Foulem
Viola Frey
John Garrett
Michael Geersten
Mary Giles
Dorothy Gill-Barnes
Andrea Gill
John Gill
Kirsten Glasbrook
John Glick
Goro Suzuki Goro
Gita Gschwendtner
Linda Gunn Russell
Chris Gustin
Bette Hansen
Yasuo Hayashi
Anna Lisa Hedstrom
Steve Heinemann
Mark Hewitt
Louise Hindsgavl
Anna Hirondale
Thomas Hoadley
Robyn Horn
Inge Hueber
Michael Hurwitz
Sergei Isupov
Ferne Jacobs
Michael F. James
Doug Jeck
Randy Johnston
Nancy Jurs Castle
Kim Kamens
Margaret Keelan
Ron Kent
Connie Kiener
Gary Knox Bennet
Yasuhisa Kohyama
Ryoji Koie
Silas Kopf
Paul Kotula
Danny Lane
Jean-Pierrot Larocque
Les Lawrence
James Lawton
Patti Lechman
Sandy Lockwood
James Loverra
Michael Lucero
Roberto Lugo
John Makepeace
Sam Maloof
Louis Marak
Robert Marsden
Andrew Martin
Claire Matthews
Alphonse Mattia
Beverly Mayeri
Ashley McCormick
Robert McGowan
Judy McKie
Nancee Meeker
Jenny Mendes
Richard Milette
Jeff Mincham
Norma Minkowitz
Keisuke Mizuno
Jennie Moncur
Jeffrey Mongrain
Steve Montgomery
Louis Mueller
Matt Nolen
Richard Nolen
Richard Notkin
Justin Novak
Masuo Ojima
Gilda Oliver
Jere Osgood
Rude Osolnik
Denise Pelletier
Jeff Perrone
Alan Peters
Peter Pierobon
Gwyn Pigott Hanssen
Ted Randall
David Regan
Colin Reid
Don Reitz
Jon Eric Riis
Tom Rippon
Ray Rogers
John Rohlfing
Ilona Romule
Allan Rosenbaum
Rudy Rudisill
Christine Sawyer
Adrian Saxe
David Secrest
Nancy Selvin
Richard Shaw
Michael Sherrill
Peter Shire
Randy Shull
Andy Siegal
Linda Sikora
Tommy Simpson
Paul Soldner
Judith Solomon
Rosanne Somerson
Victor Spinski
Chris Staley
Dirk Staschke
Suzanne Stephenson
Bill Steward
Piet Stockmans
Toshiko Takaezu
Akio Takamori
Richard Tannen
Susan Thayer
James Thompson
Kyoko Tokumaru
Tip Toland
Bob Trotman
Robert Turner
Leonard Urso
Johan Van Loon Gerard
Jindra Vikova
Peter Voulkos
Jason Walker
Katie Walker
Gizella Warburton
Kurt Weiser
Red Weldon Sandlin
Stephen Whittlesey
Matthew Wilt
Paul Winokur
Robert Winokur
Henk Wolvers
Luo Xiaoping
Sun Koo Yuh
Arnie Zimmerman
Ed Zucca



































