Project Tag: 2021

OUTSIDE TIME: Rae Stern

OUTSIDE TIME: Rae Stern

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


As an immersive experience, the installation Outside Time presents dozens of porcelain objects that upon touch light up from within, exposing hidden lithophanes. Combining innovative technology with traditional techniques, the work examines the elusive and ephemeral nature of memory as both a personal and universal phenomenon.

The body of work was created by Stern during her year-long term as Visiting Artist at the Belger Crane Yard Studios and utilizes a porcelain lithophane technique on which she collaborated with Aya Margulis. The ceramic objects are set in bricolage of vintage furniture and juxtaposed with works in paper.

During her stay in Kansas City, Stern conducted community outreach to locate pre-WWII images from the personal albums of local Holocaust survivors and their family members. The images that inspired the lithophanes portray daily scenes from pre-war life in communities across Europe that were later annihilated.

Material culture functions as a medium in Stern’s work and amplifies the sociological and psychological values encapsulated in objects that are traditionally (dis)regarded as decorative art. The pre- and post-war furniture was carefully collected and echoes the ever changing context in which the porcelain objects exist. The use of technology provides an unfamiliar experience with the familiar objects advancing the potential of contemporary ceramics to offer an engaging experience.

By creating an immersive experience and allowing the viewers to touch the ceramic objects, the installation environment brings to life narratives and memories assigned to family heirlooms and explores the potential and limitations of porcelain and paper as repositories for fading memories.

In conjunction with the current refugee crisis, the work invites the viewers to reflect on how all immigrants and refugees, from all societies, leave behind rich memories of normalcy, culture and love.

CURRENTLY ON VIEW


The power of memory is immeasurable. Individual recollections are the building blocks of our sense of self, while collective memories help define our culture. In this exhibition, six artists use clay to explore formative moments in their lives as well as stories passed down through generations, inviting viewers to consider both the uniqueness of every individual and our shared identities.

Clay has been used to create functional and decorative objects for millennia. The artists in Shaping Memories continue the rich artistic tradition of clay, exploring its creative potential and versatility. A ceramic object can preserve information about the society in which it was made for thousands of years, a charge these artists take seriously in the creation of their work. What happens when people, cultures, and traditions are forgotten, and histories are erased? How can objects help us remember, honor, and share stories of our time?

FEATURED ARTISTS
Pattie Chalmers
Hollie Lyko
Jiha Moon
Rae Stern
Ehren Tool

Organized by the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art. Curated by Alison Byrne, Deputy Director, Exhibitions and Education.

SHAPING MEMORIES: EXPRESSIONS IN CLAYVIRGINIA MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART


November 27th, 2021 through March 6th, 2022

PAST INSTALLATION


Rae Stern: In Fugue features new, groundbreaking works in porcelain and paper. On view September 26, 2019 – February 8, 2020 at the Belger Crane Yard Studios, the exhibition focuses on the elusive and ephemeral nature of memory as both a personal and universal phenomenon. Through the manipulation of translucent attributes of porcelain and paper, and with innovative use of digital technology, the works pose questions about the relationship between object, memory, and time.

IN FUGUE | BELGER CRANE YARD


September 26, 2019 – February 8, 2020

IN FUGUE | BELGER ARTS | EXHIBITION CATALOG


Flip through to view Rae Stern’s In Fugue: Outside Time at Belger Arts catalog.

NEWS AND MEDIA

More information to come

HYPOMNEMATA: Rae Stern

HYPOMNEMATA: Rae Stern

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


Recently on view at the Belger Crane Yard Gallery, the exhibition Rae Stern: In Fugue debuted new works in porcelain and paper and focuses on the elusive and ephemeral nature of memory as both a personal and universal phenomenon.

To create the large scale translucent paper, Stern manipulated the thickness of the pulp without using any pigment. The daylight shines through the thinner parts of the handmade paper, exposing the image.

In this work, Stern revisit the photographs of five young women, whose photographs she collected for the Outside Time installation. The illuminated youthful gazes, are contrasted by the tragic events that later unfolded in their lives.

Stern wonders which medium is the most suitable for these fleeting memories. While juxtaposing the paper with the porcelain she asks:

“If each material has its own set of vulnerabilities, which will outlast the other? How dependent is our collective memory on our choice of medium?”

FEATURED WORKS

(pictured left) Hypomnema; Shoshana (Rossa), 2019, Handmade paper, 28 x 20.5″

(centered) Hypomnema; Kate, 2019, Handmade paper, 71 x 33.5″

(pictured right) Hypomnema; Lili, 2019, Handmade paper, 38 x 27.5″

(pictured left) Hypomnema; Regina, 2019, Handmade paper, 34.5 x 22″

(pictured right) Hypomnema; Aennie, 2019, Handmade paper, 70 x 45″

CURRENTLY ON VIEW


Rae Stern’s “In Fugue: Hypomnemata” handmade paper works, illuminated with both natural and artificial light. Five seleced pieces hang from the atrium ceiling, hovering above the public forum and visible upon entry to the building.

Stern’s work focuses on the elusive and ephemeral nature of memory as both a personal and universal phenomenon. The photographs that inspired this group of works on paper were chosen by Stern out of the images collected for her immersive installation Outside Time — currently on view at the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art (Virginia MOCA) through March 6th.

Click here to download a media release about the exhibit.

LEON FAMILY GALLERY


Virginia Beach, VA | On view now

PAST INSTALLATION


Rae Stern: In Fugue features new, groundbreaking works in porcelain and paper. On view September 26, 2019 – February 8, 2020 at the Belger Crane Yard Studios, the exhibition focuses on the elusive and ephemeral nature of memory as both a personal and universal phenomenon. Through the manipulation of translucent attributes of porcelain and paper, and with innovative use of digital technology, the works pose questions about the relationship between object, memory, and time.

BELGER CRANE YARD


Kansas City, MO | September 26, 2019 – February 8, 2020

IN FUGUE EXHIBITION CATALOG


An exhibition catalog is now available as a limited edition. The publication includes essays by Glenn Adamson and Margaret Carney, alongside photography by T. Maxwell Wagner.
Also included are the stories behind the images that inspired the work, as well as an essay by the artist about the process of creating the exhibition.

The publication was designed by Dan Saal in collaboration with the artist. The design brings to life the tactile experience of the exhibition in a two-dimensional format. The project received generous support from Evelyn and Dick Belger.

To view or purchase the “Rae Stern: In Fugue” Catalog, please visit Rae Stern’s website.

NEWS AND MEDIA


Exhibition preview directed and produced by Johanna Brooks.
Filmed on site at the Belger Art Center and Crane Yard Studios, Kansas City, MO. 2020

MUTUAL AFFECTION: The Victoria Schonfeld Collection

MUTUAL AFFECTION: The Victoria Schonfeld Collection

July 24, 2021 – February 20, 2022

Victoria Schonfeld (1950-2019) was a prominent New York lawyer, collector, and philanthropist whose discerning eye was matched only by the fierceness of devotion to her family and friends. From the time she began collecting ceramics in the 1990s, Schonfeld developed lasting friendships with the artists who caught her eye. Schonfeld was particularly devoted to championing female artists, including Betty Woodman, Alison Britton, and Carol McNicoll, as well as younger artists like Lauren Mabry and Rain Harris. Her taste encompassed everything from classical beauty to pointedly political works, all linked by her boundless curiosity.

Long before her untimely death, Schonfeld began donating works by artists she admired to museums across the United States, including the Everson Museum of Art. It is with the deepest gratitude that the Everson accepts key works from the Schonfeld collection that will endure as a tribute to her generosity and lasting network of friendships. Mutual Affection marks the debut of the Victoria Schonfeld Collection at the Everson, fleshed out by additional works loaned by her family. Each object in this exhibition stands on its own merit, but also represents a node in Schonfeld’s vast network of reciprocal relationships.

Everson Museum of Art


Syracuse, NY | July 24, 2021 – February 20, 2022

VICTORIA SCHONFELD

SELECT COLLECTION HIGHLIGHTS

Betty Woodman, American (1930-2018)
Minoan Pillow Pitcher B, 1980
Earthenware and terra sigilata stain
Lent by the Victoria Schonfeld Collection

Ruth Duckworth, British (1919-2009)
Untitled No. 656100, 2000
Porcelain
Lent by the Victoria Schonfeld Collection

Myashita Zenji, Japanese (1939-2012)
Triangular, 2003
Stoneware and colored clay
Lent by the Victoria Schonfeld Collection

Kate Malone, British (b. 1959)
Small Lidded Flower Jar and Waddesdon Bird, 2016
Crystalline-glazed stoneware and porcelain
Lent by the Victoria Schonfeld Collection

IN DIALOGUE: Cristina Córdova & Kukuli Velarde

IN DIALOGUE: Cristina Córdova & Kukuli Velarde

October 16 to December 30, 2021

Public Reception 4 to 5:30 pm
4:30 Conversation with artist, Kukuli Velarde

FERRIN CONTEMPORARY
1315 MASS MoCA Way, North Adams MA

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


North Adams,  MA

Ferrin Contemporary presents IN DIALOGUE: Cristina Córdova & Kukuli Velarde. The two artists share several overlapping identities as Latina sculptors working in the figural tradition. Each explores subjects drawn from both their cultural histories and their roles as mothers, daughters and parents of young women documenting their own and their subjects’ generational changes. This exhibition opens simultaneously with MASS MoCA’s Ceramics in The Expanded Field, curated by Senior Curator Susan Cross. 

The newest works in the exhibition were produced in 2021 during the pandemic when each artist could focus deeply on major works, uninterrupted by travel; to-date, Velarde’s painting and Cordova’s sculpture may be some of these artists most important and large-scale works.

October 16 – December 30, 2021


AT FERRIN CONTEMPORARY | North Adams, MA

Exhibition catalog for IN DIALOGUE: Cristina Cordova & Kukuli Velarde at Ferrin Contemporary, Oct. 16 to Dec. 30, 2021. With luscious photos and detailed artist statements, this catalog gives depth and insight into the motivations behind the exhibition and the artworks therein.

  • October 16 to December 30, 2021 at Ferrin Contemporary, curated by Leslie Ferrin
  • Catalog features detailed artist statements
  • Published on 

EVENTS

October 16, 4:30pm: Conversation with artist Kukuli Velarde

PRESS

Berkshire Eagle
11.05.21 IN DIALOGUE: Latina artists use clay, female form to explore personal, generational, and cultural identity 

Rural Intelligence Recommends
10.16.21 Ferrin Contemporary: Cristina Córdova and Kukuli Velarde

Berkshire Eagle 
10.15.21 BE mentions Ferrin Contemporary in coverage of MASS MoCA’s CERAMICS IN THE EXPANDED FIELD exhibition

COLLECTION FOCUS: Mara Superior at the Racine Art Museum

COLLECTION FOCUS: Mara Superior at the Racine Art Museum

COLLECTION FOCUS: Mara Superior at the Racine Art Museum

August 18, 2021 – January 15, 2022

Racine Art Museum
441 Main Street | Racine, WI 53403

ABOUT THE COLLECTION FOCUS

Blending past and present-day concerns, notions of Americana, and personal experience, Mara Superior playfully both challenges and adds to a history of porcelain decorative objects and tableware. With a singular aesthetic that feels reverent yet unique, Superior builds narratives that unfold through images, words, and form.

Comprised entirely of work from RAM’s collection that span over three decades, this exhibition showcases several of the artist’s core interests. They emphasize Superior’s personal history—her connection to art and ceramic history, her appreciation for “home” and ideas about the domestic, and her love of travel. While these are not the only topics she addresses in her work, they are foundational ones and provide a layered and nuanced accounting of the artist’s approach to working with porcelain. Engaging scenes play out across a range of objects, including platters, teapots, vessels, and a collaborative piece with the artist’s late husband, sculptor and furniture maker, Roy Superior.

Significantly, this exhibition debuts a multi-piece gift from the Kohler Foundation, Inc., that catapults RAM’s holdings of work by Superior from two pieces, already gifted by other donors, to 33. In doing so, this gift establishes several milestones for Superior at RAM—making her an archive artist as well as the most collected female ceramic artist and the second most collected ceramic artist regardless of gender.

ABOUT MARA SUPERIOR

Mara Superior is an American visual artist who works in porcelain. Her ceramic high relief platters and sculptural objects reflect the artist’s passion for art history and decorative arts, and her painterly motifs range from the pleasures of the domestic to serious political and environmental issues as points of departure to comment on contemporary culture and its relationship to history. Superior has received numerous awards including a National Endowment for the Visual Arts Fellowship, the prestigious Guldaggergård Residency in Denmark, and numerous individual artist grants from the Massachusetts Cultural Council.

Superior has exhibited at the American Museum of Ceramic Art, (Pomona, CA), Scripps Women’s College, (Claremont, CA), and the Fuller Craft Museum, (Brockton, MA) among many other institutions. Her work can be found in the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, (Washington, DC), the Museum of Arts and Design, (New York, NY), the Peabody Essex Museum, (Salem, MA), Philadelphia Museum of Art, (Philadelphia, PA) the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, (Los Angeles, CA), White House Collection of American Craft, (Little Rock, AK). An in depth collection of her work was recently acquired by the Racine Art Museum, (Racine, WI) with the support of Kohler Foundation, (Sheboygan, WI). In 2010 she was interviewed for the oral history program of the Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art, (Washington, DC). Superior studied at the Pratt Institute and Hartford Art School, completing her BFA in painting from the University of Connecticut followed by a MAT in ceramics from the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. She is represented by Ferrin Contemporary.

MELTING POINT

MELTING POINT

HELLER GALLERY

303 10th Avenue, New York, NY

FERRIN CONTEMPORARY

1315 MASS MoCA Way, North Adams MA


June 24 to September 25, 2021

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


The Melting Point is the degree when solid becomes soft, eventually becoming liquid and a boiling point is reached. Glaze melts, clay and glass soften, surface and form become pliable. This exhibition surveys a ​diverse ​group of artists whose use of the melting point is central to their practice.

Used metaphorically, as the planet warms we are finding ourselves closer to the melting point both physically and socially. In 2020, forces combined under pressure of the COVID virus, politics exploded and nature responded with melting ice, raging fires and extreme weather. Likewise, artists use the melting point as a metaphor in their work to express their political beliefs and sound the alarm using the fragile materials of glass and ceramic.

The exhibition is ​a ​collaboration​ between Ferrin Contemporary in North Adams, MA on the MASS MoCA campus and ​Heller Gallery, located in the Chelsea Art District of New York City​. The co-curators and gallery directors are renowned specialists in their fields, Leslie Ferrin (ceramics) and Katya Heller (glass).

VIEW THE EXHIBITION CATALOG HERE

PRESENTATION at Ferrin Contemporary


PRESENTATION at Heller Gallery


EXHIBITING ARTISTS

PAST PROGRAMMING

SELECT PRESS


MELTING POINT in the Boston Globe
8.5.21 Cate McQuaid gives a quick glance at the exhibition in The Ticket section of The Boston Globe.

Arriving at the MELTING POINT in Destination Williamstown
7.20.21 Destination Williamstown interviews Ferrin Contemporary Director Leslie Ferrin and gets to the historical heart of MELTING POINT.

BUSINESS MONDAY: Did people buy art during COVID? 
6.28.21 Julia Dickson of The Berkshire Eagle reports on a “difficult but successful” year for Berkshire gallerists.

BOBBY SILVERMAN AT PORCHES INN

BOBBY SILVERMAN AT PORCHES INN

2021 Summer Season

Presented at
The Porches Inn at MASS MoCA
231 River St. North Adams, MA 01247

ABOUT THE FEATURE

Ferrin Contemporary curates changing art by gallery artists at Porches Inn, often concurrent with the exhibitions. Porches Inn is a short walk from the gallery on the MASS MoCA campus in North Adams. 

Over the last 30 years, Bobby Silverman has become one of the foremost contemporary artists and designers working in ceramics.

Originally trained in Japan with the Master Potter Samejima Saturo, Silverman continued his undergraduate studies at the Kansas City Art Institute and received his Master of Fine Arts from Alfred University in 1983. Since then, he has taught and directed several university programs including the #5 ranked graduate program at Louisiana State University.

Silverman balances material, process, and idea in a strong, unified whole. In his materials, he brings together pieces with international origins: large-format tiles that originate in China and glazes from England and the Netherlands. Silverman’s technically demanding process combines complex glazing and multi-firing methods that unite the materials in a way that supports and conveys his underlying concepts.

He has exhibited internationally and his work is included in the collections of the European Ceramic Work Center in the Netherlands, the Museum of Art and Design, NY, and the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC . He is represented by Bentley Gallery, Phoenix/Scottsdale, AZ, Harvey Meadows Gallery, Aspen, CO and Sherry Leedy Contemporary Art, Kansas City, MO.

Previous Installation & Additionally Available

SHAPES FROM OUT OF NOWHERE | The Met Fifth Avenue

SHAPES FROM OUT OF NOWHERE | The Met Fifth Avenue

The Met Fifth Avenue

Gallery913 | Metropolitan Museum of Art | New York, NY

February 22nd – August 29th, 2021

Shapes from Out of Nowhere: Ceramics from the Robert A. Ellison Jr. Collection celebrates an extraordinary gift of 125 modern and contemporary ceramics from Robert A. Ellison Jr., made to The Met in honor of the Museum’s 150th anniversary. The exhibition will present a selection of over 75 works from this unparalleled collection that charts the evolution of abstraction in clay from the second half of the twentieth century through the present.

Five total works by Raymon Elozua are included in the permanent collection, three of which will be on view during the exhibition.

Artists include: Robert Arneson, Rudy Autio, F. Carlton Ball, Lynda Benglis, Kate Blacklock, Nina Borgia-Aberle, Alison Britton, Kathy Butterly, Peter Callas, Syd Carpenter, Christina Carver, Katherine Choy, Dieter Crumbiegel, Elisa D’Arrigo, Harris Deller, Richard DeVore, Kim Dickey, Gary DiPasquale, Ruth Duckworth, Raymon Elozua, Gary Erickson, Ken Ferguson, Amara Geffen, John Gill, Chris Gustin, Babs Haenen, Ewen Henderson, Wayne Higby, Margaret Israel, Howard Kottler, Anne Marie Laureys, Gareth Mason, John Mason, Leza McVey, Jim Melchert, Ursula Morley Price, Gertrud Natzler, Otto Natzler, Win Ng, William Parry, Ken Price, Aneta Regel, Mary Rogers, Stanley Rosen, Axel Salto, Paul Soldner, Rudofl Staffel, Chris Staley, Susanna Stephenson, Toshiko Takaezu, Kyoto Tonegawa, Robert Turner, Peter Voulkos, Frans Wildenhain, Marguerite Wildenhain, Betty Woodman, William Wyman and Arnold Zimmerman.

“I first met Bob Ellison at the Everson Ceramic National in 1993. At that time I did not know of his many accomplishments as a painter, photographer, writer and collector. Bob lived several blocks away and on my first visit I learned of his passion for all things ceramic, American art pottery, contemporary ceramics and above all the work of George Ohr. I felt privileged that Bob acquired several works of mine for his collection. Over the years it has been a pleasure to talk about contemporary ceramics, view his recent acquisitions, and trade bottles of wine. As well, Bob has also been a major influence for me to improve my photography skills.” Raymon Elozua

The related publication Shapes from Out of Nowhere: Ceramics from the Robert A. Ellison Jr. Collection, published by August Editions, is a lavishly illustrated catalogue including essays by Glenn Adamson and Robert A. Ellison Jr., artist biographies by Elizabeth Essner, and an introduction by Adrienne Spinozzi.

“In 1988, Harry Dennis, the publisher of American Ceramics magazine, held an all-day symposium on ceramics, entitled “The Art of Collecting.” There were panels consisting of artists, curators, writers, critics, collectors, and gallery owners. I attended. Despite the rich diversity of the participants, the talk droned on and on and on. One of the last people to speak was the artist Raymon Elozua, whom I had never heard of before. His words were like uninsulated electricity. He woke us up (at least me), telling everyone how boring it had been (which was true) and what they should have been talking about. I was determined to know this artist.

In 1993, the Everson Museum of Art invited me to be a juror for the 29th Ceramic National exhibition. A wire-frame “teapot” by Raymon Elozua had been accepted for the exhibition. At the reception after the show, Raymon introduced himself. At last, after hearing him speak at the symposium a few years earlier, we got together in New York City; we have been fast friends ever since. Raymon has been an important influence in loosening up some of my rigid thinking concerning clay. Obsessed with decay and destruction, he has created work by destroying and then reconstructing pots by attaching shared to facsimile angle irons made of clay to create sculpture (FIG. 23). In more recent work, he has used his skill in welding to create shapes with a wire armature while adding bits of clay and glaze to the steel and firing them in a kiln. His forms have become totally abstract, not a recognizable shape in sight. He is a rare combination, not only capable of thinking very abstractly but also a fine craftsman.”

– Robert A. Ellison Jr.

“With this most recent donation of modern and contemporary ceramics, the Metropolitan Museum of Art has acquired over six hundred works from Robert A. Ellison Jr., a remarkable legacy for this pioneering collector with an unparalleled vision. In scope, depth, and quality, his gifts have forever redefined the holdings of this institution while expanding our understanding of and appreciation for the ceramic arts. This recent landmark gift, and the accompanying exhibition and book, is no different in significance: only a collector with such innate knowledge of the medium could chart the path towards abstraction in clay.”

– Adrienne Spinozzi, Assistant Research Curator in the American Wing, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

AMERICAN EXPRESSIONS/AFRICAN ROOTS

AMERICAN EXPRESSIONS/AFRICAN ROOTS

This exhibition focuses specifically on the artist’s clay sculptures fired using the Western-style raku technique — including representations of spiritual deities, equestrian figures that combine American history with African sculptural tradition, and lidded vessels referencing the African slave trade and the devastating evils of pursing profit. Drawing heavily on narrative tradition and personal experiences, including extensive travels throughout Africa, Kambon’s work celebrates perseverance through hardship, cultural pride, and his gift as a storyteller.

Born as Mark Teemer in Sacramento, Akinsanya Kambon is a former Marine, Black Panther, and art professor. Stricken with polio as a child, he turned to drawing for comfort, and ultimately his therapy. He recalls in his adolescence frequent visits to the Crocker Art Museum, which fascinated him and showed him the human potential in creating art. He served a tour of duty in Vietnam with the United States Marine Corps from 1966–1968. Shortly thereafter, he created The Black Panther Coloring Book to bring attention to racial inequality and social injustice. Despite being only semi-literate in his youth, Kambon went on to earn his Master of Arts from California State University, Fresno. In more recent years, he was featured in Wartorn: 1861–2010, an HBO documentary screened at the Pentagon on post-traumatic stress disorder in veterans.

Today, Kambon’s work is as rich and varied as his personal history, expressed through drawings, paintings, bronze sculptures, and ceramics. This exhibition focuses specifically on the artist’s clay sculptures, which are fired using the Western-style raku technique — a challenging, dangerous, and unpredictable process that creates prismatic and iridescent glaze finishes. He performs kiln firings in a ceremonial manner, breathing life into ceramic figures that typically represent African deities and spirits and, sometimes, American history and religious subjects. Drawing heavily on narrative tradition and personal experiences, including extensive travels throughout Africa, Kambon’s work celebrates perseverance through hardship, cultural pride, and his gift as a storyteller. Click HERE to learn more.

NATURE/NURTURE

NATURE/NURTURE

2021 | NATURE/NURTURE II

NCECA 2021 Virtual Conference
Rivers, Reflections, and Reinvention
March 17, 2021 – March 21, 2021

Gallery Presentation
1315 MASS MoCA Way, North Adams
March 17, 2021 – May 29, 2021

In March 2020 we invited a group of women artists to explore the influence of gender and its impact on their creative practice. This year, Nature/Nurture returns with new additional works as a virtual exhibition at NCECA’s first virtual conference, with select works on view at Ferrin Contemporary.

Opening Reception

March 19, 2021 @ 7pm on Zoom

Shop Select Works

Select works available on our Online Store.
Inquire for additional works.

NATURE/NURTURE, Gallery Installation presented in 2020 at 1315 MASS MoCA Way, March 4 -June 27, 2020.

2020 | NATURE/NURTURE

1315 MASS MoCA Way, North Adams
March 4 – June 27, 2020

Ferrin Contemporary is pleased to present Nature/Nurture, a group exhibition of twelve contemporary female artists invited to explore the influence of gender and its impact on their practice.

This timely exhibition explores these ideas that range from direct interpretations of the natural world to more abstract notions, such as the construction of gender and the endowed role of women within their personal and professional careers. Works in clay range in form from individual vessels to composed still lifes and figural and abstract sculpture.

Gallery director Leslie Ferrin chose a group of twelve female artists whose works and careers provide a range of diverse perspectives related to age, cultural identity and work being done in contemporary ceramics. Considering the impact that the #MeToo movement is having on all professions, Ferrin asked the artists to pause and reflect on the role gender plays in their artistic practice and to consider the nurturing experiences that have shaped them.

Ferrin writes, “A renewed awareness and galvanizing commitment for change is surging through American cultural and academic institutions, organizations and businesses of every sort, exposing the crying need for structural change; specifically, the advancement of equality for artists of all genders and elimination of sexual harassment, wage discrimination and other forms of sexism that continue to affect the lives of women, transgender and non-binary individuals. As part of the movement to reverse and rebalance with new priorities and opening doors, it is crucial to offer opportunities to artists who have been historically marginalized.”

Nature assigned these artists, who identify as female, on a given path, whereas nurture is an accumulation of experiences, influences and impact with both positive and negative results on personal and professional lives. Seen as a whole, this group of twelve women artists who live and work throughout the USA, is representative of the rising tide of professional opportunities for women artists. While significant earnings and advancement gaps remain, a course correction is underway through the increasing number of gender and culturally specific exhibitions. As priorities shift for museum collections, educational public programming and private collectors, these efforts to course-correct are bringing recognition to artists previously overlooked and undervalued and to undocumented legacies. Nature/Nurture seeks to contribute to and further this recognition.

Inspired by the important work of Judith Butler and Helen Longino, the artists in the show were invited to explore the influence of ‘Nature/Nurture’ within their practice. The work ranges from more direct interpretations of the natural world, to more abstract notions, such as the construction of gender, and endowed role of women.

“Possibility is not a luxury; it is as crucial as bread.”
― Judith Butler, Undoing Gender, 2004

PRESS & FEATURES:

ONLINE PROGRAMMING:

ZOOM/ONLINE PROGRAM | Women in Ceramics with Garth Johnson at Everson Museum of Art – Friday, May 15, 2020.

“Nature/Nurture” Installation View, with Anina Major, 2020.