Project Tag: Ferrin Contemporary

CRISTINA CƓRDOVA: Del balcón

CRISTINA CƓRDOVA: Del balcón

CRISTINA CƓRDOVA: Del balcón

solo exhibition

Ferrin Contemporary
1315 MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, MA
July 28–September 16, 2018

 

Preview Talk: Thursday, August 2, 7:00 pm

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


North Adams, MA —

Ferrin Contemporary presents Del balcón, a solo exhibition of new work by Cristina Córdova, featuring large and small figurative sculptures exploring the relationship between the human and geographic connections within her native Puerto Rican landscape.

Working directly from the human form, Córdova’s hand builds often life-size ceramic figures that gaze at, or through the viewer, asking them to consider what’s behind the eyes. A reference to landscape, both large and small, is introduced, creating tropical tableaux for the figure to reside within. Del balcón, comes on the heals of a large solo exhibition at the Alfred Ceramic Art Museum in Alfred, N.Y., in early 2018 where director Wayne Higby notes,

“Cristina’s figurative work has established her as one of the preeminent ceramic artists of her generation. Her work renders the figure as a mysterious, sensual force of compelling urgency. Her masterful use of the ceramic medium empowers her work with a mesmerizing, at times uncanny presence.”

CRISTINA CƓRDOVA: Del balcón


REVIVE, REMIX, RESPOND

REVIVE, REMIX, RESPOND

THE FRICK PITTSBURGH


7227 Reynolds St., Pittsburgh, PA

February 17–May 27, 2018

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


In 2017, twenty contemporary artists were invited to respond to and produce new works that reference the art, objects, and social history of The Frick’s collections.Ā 

Many contemporary artists are breathing new life into the ceramic medium by reviving and reinvigorating age-old concepts. This reinvention is distilled into the use of 18th-century processes and techniques to create new motifs and the depiction of stories inspired by history — often with a commentary or critique on modern society.

This topic is particularly relevant to the current state of the ceramics and museum field as it answers the questions of how history meets contemporary. How can artists draw on the rich artistic traditions of ceramic history while reinvigorating their relevance in a society that prizes the contemporary? Likewise, how can museums use contemporary ceramic art to illuminate and reinvigorate historic collections? The Frick Pittsburgh is committed to using the voices and artworks of contemporary artists to meaningfully engage our audience and our collections with issues and ideas relevant to the present day. Revive, Remix, Respond is an exciting opportunity to continue that dialogue.

Organized by Dawn Reid Brean, Associate Curator of Decorative Arts at The Frick Pittsburgh with Leslie Ferrin of Ferrin Contemporary, the museum has invited artists to submit work that is inspired by, responds to, or relates to historic ceramics in The Frick Pittsburgh’s permanent collection. Highlight’s from the museum’s collection include Clayton, the historic Gilded Age home of industrialist and art collector Henry Clay Frick and its impressive array of fine and decorative arts objects; 18th-century Chinese porcelains purchased by Frick from the collection of J. P. Morgan; and 18th-century French painting and decorative arts collected by Frick’s daughter, Helen Clay Frick.

The exhibition will consider the sources of inspiration shaping ceramics today and ways to keep clay vital in museums, schools, and artistic communities. These ideas directly relate to the organizing theme of NCECA 2018, CrossCurrents: Clay and Culture.

INSTALLATION


EXHIBITING ARTISTS


PAST PROGRAMMING


Remix Your Friday Exhibition Preview
Friday, February 16, 5:30–7:30pm

Join us for a happy hour in The Frick Art Museum to celebrate the opening of this exhibition, Be among the first to see this unique exhibition, which features work from established and emerging artists. The evening will also feature gallery talks from exhibition curator Dawn Brean and exhibited artist Beth Lipman.

FEATURED WORKS


SIN-YING HO: Past Forward

SIN-YING HO: Past Forward

SIN-YING HO: PAST FORWARD

March 30–May 27, 2018
Hood Downtown,Ā 53 Main Street, Hanover, NH

Opening with the artist Friday, April 6, 5–7pm
ā€œConversations and Connectionsā€ discussion between Hood Director John Stomberg and Sin-ying Ho on Saturday, April 7, 2–3pm

If Chinese ceramic art has a heart, it beats in Jingdezhen. For centuries, artisans there have made vessels that traveled far and wide. Their fluid forms and recognizable decorations have inspired celebratory prose and devoted followers around the world. Today, Sin-ying Ho works in these same ceramics factories. Though Jingdezhen potters have long defined tradition, Sin-ying has expanded both their forms and their imagery in contemporary ceramics that are thoroughly of the twenty-first century. She makes her works—whether they are monumental vases or smaller, more clearly assembled sculptures—from multiple parts. She emphasizes the many parts by glazing each of the pieces differently. Together they form a whole that maintains the legacy of being created from myriad fragments.

Sin-ying’s process of building is an essential metaphor for her artistic practice. With it, she implies an optimism for our society’s continued ability to construct a unified world. As reflected in her technique, and in the themes addressed by her surface imagery, this world will necessarily be an amalgam of new and old, here and there, greed and generosity, men and women, faith and despair. Through these combinations, Sin-ying shares a worldview that acknowledges the inherent contradictions and challenges of global culture while also anticipating the uncanny beauty emerging all around us.

This exhibition was organized by the Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth, and generously supported by the Philip Fowler 1927 Memorial Fund.

Click to view more work by Sin-ying Ho

 

Cristina Córdova: JUNGLA

Cristina Córdova: JUNGLA

CRISTINA CƓRDOVA:
JUNGLA
Alfred Ceramic Art Museum
Alfred, NY
February 2–July 16, 2018
Opening Reception: February 2, 2018, 6–9 pm
Ā  Ā  Artist talk: 4:30 pm

 

“At its most basic level Jungla refers to a region of dense, intractable wilderness that sustains an ongoing evolutionary dance governed by uncivilized forces. This tropical landscape of my youth is a beacon to an identity, tying me back to a specific geography and the sediment of generations. It’s unrelenting influence speaks of luscious yet ominous constructs that echo the socio-political conditions in the Caribbean. It’s unruly mystery seeps out of its confines to also serve as metaphor for a creative process anchored in that liminal space between chaos and balance. A practice that gathers significance amidst the subconscious forces that underpin reality and the firm directives of the ego. Through image and form, Jungla explores the relationship between these human and geographic connections.” — Cristina Córdova

BETH LIPMAN

BETH LIPMAN

ARTWORKS & INSTALLATIONS

Miles’ Law is a large-scale work designed to investigate Marjorie Merriweather Post’s use of diplomacy to bridge political, cultural, and societal divides. The sculpture is a rumination on Rufus Miles’s phrase, ā€˜Where you stand depends on where you sit,’ and explores how one’s view of a situation is shaped by one’s relationship to it. Post deftly employed domestic rituals that literally ā€œbrought people to the tableā€ such as dinner parties and other social functions to subtly persuade disparate individuals to empathize with another point of view.

Visually split down the center, half of the work will be composed of clear glass and the other half, black glass, with each composition mirroring the other. The duality will be disrupted by biomorphic forms that will protrude and grow through the composition, mimicking natural growth and entropic forces. This liberation illustrates how we are all susceptible to external forces and are subject to cycles of change. The still life tableau capitalizes on the genre’s capacity to illuminate the ways that one understands the world through visual metaphors.

Miles’ Law reflects on the current polarization that seems extraordinary, yet is an inherent aspect of the human condition. The twinning effect of the sculpture embodies the duality at the core of every individual. The marriage of transparent and opaque glass illustrates continuity with difference, embracing the inevitable variation of the hand made.

— Beth Lipman, 2023

Lapsed Concession

Sphenophyllum and Chains

Cluster #26

Cluster #28

Chalice and Tanalian-Mountain II

Still Life with Plate of Cheese and Stein

Bottles and Flora

Vessel with Handles and Bowl of Eggs

In Distill, small cardboard boxes holding ancient flora such as conifer, lichen, and ferns were arranged with miniature furniture and domestic objects to create small-scale dioramas, forcing the relationship between prehistoric and current geological eras. The uncanny environ was created when the casting process produced replicas and destroyed the landscapes, translating vignettes into fossilized depictions of the Anthropocene era.

Distill #4

Distill #7

Distill #8

Distill #12

BETH LIPMAN


Beth Lipman Art Portrait, 2025, Kristina Broughton Photography

ABOUT


American, b. 1971, New York, NY
lives and works in Sheboygan Falls, WI

Beth Lipman is an American artist whose sculptural practice generates from the Still Life genre, symbolically representing the splendor and excess of the Anthropocene and the stratigraphic layer humanity will leave on earth. Assemblages of inanimate objects and domestic interiors, inspired by private spaces and public collections, propose portraits of individuals, institutions, and societies.

Temporality and mortality-primary concerns linked to the Still Life tradition are heightened through materiality. Works in glass, wood, metal, photography, and video disrupt the mechanisms of fixed, grand narratives in order to emphasize evanescence at the heart of ā€˜vanitas’. Sculptural processes become analogies for life cycles, pointing to systems both natural and human that must continually adapt in order to survive.

The works are a meditation on our relationship to Deep Time, a monumental time scale based on geologic events that minimizes human lives. Each installation is a reimagining of history, created by placing cycles often separated by millennia in proximity, from the ancient botanical to the cultural. The incorporation of prehistoric flora alludes to the impermanence of the present and the persistence of life. The ephemera of the Anthropocene become a symbol of fragility as the human species is placed on a continuum where time eradicates hierarchy.

Lipman has received numerous awards including a USA Berman Bloch Fellowship, Pollock Krasner Grant, Virginia Groot Foundation Grant, and a Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Grant. She recently completed One Portrait of One Man, a sculptural response to Marsden Hartley for the Weisman Art Museum (MN). Lipman has exhibited her work internationally at such institutions as the Ringling Museum of Art (FL), ICA/MECA (ME), RISD Museum (RI), Milwaukee Art Museum (WI), Gustavsbergs Konsthall (Sweden) and the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum (DC). Her work has been acquired by numerous museums including the North Carolina Museum of Art, Brooklyn Museum of Art (NY), Smithsonian American Art Museum (DC), and the Corning Museum of Glass (NY).

MORE ON BETH LIPMAN

Beth Lipman explores aspects of material culture through still lives, site-specific installations, and photographs. Working primarily with glass, she creates portraits individuals and our society through inanimate objects that are often broken, ā€œflawed,ā€ or ā€œperfectā€. Ā Mortality, consumerism, materiality, and temporality, have been critical issues since the inception of the still life tradition in the 17th century, and continue to be relevant her in contemporary work.

— Beth Lipman

Beth Lipman, Artist Portrait with “Miles’ Law”, 2023

Beth Lipman, “Miles’ Law”, 2023, glass, wood

ON MILES’ LAW

Miles’ Law is a large-scale work designed to investigate Marjorie Merriweather Post’s use of diplomacy to bridge political, cultural, and societal divides. The sculpture is a rumination on Rufus Miles’s phrase, ā€˜Where you stand depends on where you sit,’ and explores how one’s view of a situation is shaped by one’s relationship to it. Post deftly employed domestic rituals that literally ā€œbrought people to the tableā€ such as dinner parties and other social functions to subtly persuade disparate individuals to empathize with another point of view.

Visually split down the center, half of the work will be composed of clear glass and the other half, black glass, with each composition mirroring the other. The duality will be disrupted by biomorphic forms that will protrude and grow through the composition, mimicking natural growth and entropic forces. This liberation illustrates how we are all susceptible to external forces and are subject to cycles of change. The still life tableau capitalizes on the genre’s capacity to illuminate the ways that one understands the world through visual metaphors.

Miles’ Law reflects on the current polarization that seems extraordinary, yet is an inherent aspect of the human condition. The twinning effect of the sculpture embodies the duality at the core of every individual. The marriage of transparent and opaque glass illustrates continuity with difference, embracing the inevitable variation of the hand made.

— Beth Lipman, 2023

Beth Lipman, ā€œDistill #7ā€ 2016, cast iron with rust patina, chrome, 8 x 12 x 5ā€.

ON DISTILL #7

Distill #7 combines ancient plant species such as conifer, lichen, and ferns with miniature furniture in a small vignette. The original is created in a cardboard shipping box and then cast in molten iron. Forcing the relationship between prehistoric and current geological eras, the casting process at once creates a replica and destroys the landscape, translating diorama into a fossilized depiction of the Anthropocene era. Distill #7 features symbolic objects of the sabbath, a shadow of domesticity with a bottle and clock.

— Beth Lipman

RECENT EXHIBITIONS

BETH LIPMAN: Hive Mind

2025 | Iowa State University | Aimes, IA

August 25, 2025 through May 2027

LEARN MORE

BETH LIPMAN: Middle of the Story

2025 | Christian Petersen Art Museum |Ā Iowa State University | Aimes, IA

August 25, 2025 – December 19, 2025

LEARN MORE

Beth Lipman: ReGift

2023 | Toledo Museum of ArtĀ | Toledo, OH

August 12, 2023 — September 1, 2024

SELECT PAST EXHIBITIONS

VIDEOS


Glass Lecture Series | A Virtual Studio Tour with Beth Lipman

Artist Beth Lipman, whose sculpture Miles’ Law is on view in Hillwood’s first floor library, shares her Wisconsin studio, providing a look at her artistic practice and several upcoming commissions.

Featuring Beth Lipman’s sculpture Miles’ Law, on display in the first floor library at Hillwood through January 14th, 2024

A short film by Atesh Atici offers insight into House Album, a new work that explores identity and the United States.

This film was generously funded by Alturas Foundation

Beth Lipman: Craft In America Messages Episode

Glass artist Beth Lipman segment including UrbanGlass and John Michael Kohler Arts Center.

MESSAGES episode PBS premiered: May 24, 2011

MAD Moments: Special Edition with Artist Beth Lipman

For more than twenty years, artist Beth Lipman has transformed glass, metal, clay, video, and photographs into powerful statements addressing mortality, temporality, identity, and excess. Her ongoing project, House Album is a highlight of Beth Lipman: Collective Elegy, (September 24, 2021–January 2, 2022), the Museum’s survey of the artist’s last decade of work. Covering an entire wall, House Album comprises a multitude of flat glass panels, between which are sandwiched photographs of furniture and objects that memorialize important events or notable figures from American history. Recalling a Victorian scrapbook, the installation is an allegory of our collective home. A stunning yet polarized house struggling to make sense of its own history and identity. This film gives insight into Beth Lipman’s process as well as the deep routed ideas and beliefs that influence her work. Filmmaker Atesh Atici, with funding provided by the Alturas Foundation.

https://madmuseum.org

INQUIRE


Additional works may be available to acquire, but not listed here.

If interested in lists of all works and series: Send us a message

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NEW YORK CERAMIC & GLASS FAIR 2018

NEW YORK CERAMIC & GLASS FAIR 2018

NYC&G FAIR 2018


Bohemian National Hall, New York, NY | January 18–21, 2018

Bringing together a carefully selected and distinguished international group of more than 25 galleries offering all things “fired” — porcelain, pottery, and glass, in a setting perfect for the exhibition and sale of important small objects.

SPECIAL EXHIBITION

“Revive, Remix, Respond: Contemporary Ceramic Artists at The NYC&GF and The Frick Pittsburgh”

Organized by Dawn Reid Brean, Associate Curator of Decorative Arts at The Frick Pittsburgh, and Leslie Ferrin of Ferrin Contemporary.

In 2017, twenty contemporary artists were invited to respond to and produce new works that reference the art, objects and social history of the The Frick’s collections. Selected works by these artists whose artistic practice is informed by the past will preview in a special exhibition at the NYC&GF followed by the full exhibition at The Frick Pittsburgh, February 16–April 27, 2018. Click for more.

See below for illustrated lecture by Dawn Reid Brean.

LECTURE HIGHLIGHTS

“Pincus: Channeling Josiah Wedgwood”
with Peter Pincus
Friday, January 19, 12pm

Artist Peter Pincus speaks about his research and into the Wedgwood Collections at Birmingham Museum of Art and how conversations with curator Anne Forschler of the Birmingham Museum of Art are being incorporated into his new work and teaching. Pincus is visiting assistant professor of ceramics in the School for American Crafts at the Rochester Institute of Technology. Click for more.

“Revive, Remix, Respond: Contemporary Ceramic Artists at The Frick Pittsburgh”
with Dawn Brean and artists TBD
Friday, January 19, 2–3:00 p.m.

Dawn Reid Brean, Associate Curator of Decorative Arts at The Frick Pittsburgh, with Leslie Ferrin of Ferrin Contemporary and artists featured in the exhibition whose work is inspired by, responds to, or relates to historic ceramics in The Frick Pittsburgh’s permanent collection. Click for more.

“Time Travel in the Period Room”
with Elisabeth Agro, Barry Harwood, Sarah Carter
Friday, January 19, 4–5:00 p.m.

Three museum curators speak about exhibitions and projects that connect past and present in innovative ways, activating spaces through collaborations with contemporary artists and interdisciplinary scholars and informing new works. The curators will share how through working with contemporary artists and interdisciplinary scholars new works evolved, historic information revealed, audiences engaged, educational programming developed and connections made to the past while reflecting on present day issues.

• Elisabeth Agro is The Nancy M. McNeil Curator of American Modern and Contemporary Crafts and Decorative Arts at the Philadelphia Museum of Art
• Sarah Anne Carter, Ph.D. is the Curator and Director of Research of the Chipstone
Foundation
• Barry R. Harwood, Ph.D. is the Curator of Decorative Arts at the Brooklyn Museum

Click for more.

“American Studio Pottery — Making of a Movement”
Adrienne Spinozzi withĀ Linda Sikora and Mark Shapiro
Saturday, January 20, 4pm

Internationally recognized potters Linda Sikora and Mark Shapiro discuss their divergent backgrounds, training, and influences as a way to touch on significant themes in postwar North American ceramics.

Moderator Adrienne Spinozzi is Assistant Research Curator of American Decorative Arts, The American Wing, at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.Ā Linda Sikora resides near Alfred NY where she has a studio practice and is a Professor or Ceramic Art at Alfred University. Mark Shapiro is a potter in Western Massachusetts. He is a frequent workshop leader, lecturer, curator, panelist, and writer, and is mentor to more than a half-dozen apprentices who have trained at his Stonepool Pottery. Click for more.

Dirk Staschke "Vanitas 1"

THE WOMEN

THE WOMEN

THE WOMEN


Oct 28, 2017 – Apr 21, 2018

Ferrin Contemporary
1315 MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, MA

Click here for details.

Works on view include recent pieces by women whose primary medium is clay and selected works from private and artist archives by female potters and sculptors.


The Women provides Ferrin Contemporary an opportunity to highlight the range of work by women artists affiliated with the gallery program who are known for their work in ceramics.

Director Leslie Ferrin, a life long advocate for women in ceramics reflects on this moment, ā€œIt is gratifying to witness the attention to gender issues taking place throughout society.Ā  These same forces are fueling the interest in examining and bringing recognition to the overlooked contributions of women to postwar visual arts. Many of our collectors who brought a female perspective to building their collections are contributing to the public dialog by acquiring new works and making gifts to institutions. Museums are responding by offering exhibition opportunities, site specific commissions and adding to permanent collections to fill in gaps. It is an exciting time to see these changes taking place and being able to participate in the process.”

Studio Pottery and Design*
Works by
Laura Andreson
Dorothy Hafner
Karen Karnes
Jenny Mendez
Linda Sikora
*available in Ferrin Contemporary square shop

RELATED NEWS, PUBLICATIONS + EVENTS

The Women

Ferrin Contemporary presents selected works by women artists whose primary medium is clay. On view in the gallery and online, we introduce new works by emerging and established artists along with masterworks available from private collections and artist archives.

STUDIO POTTER: WOMEN IN CERAMICS

Winter/Spring 2017
Women in Ceramics Vol. 45 No. 1

In this issue: nine essays remembering the life of Karen Karnes, a deep investigation of the legacy of women in wood-firing, several narratives about artists’ personal journeys in clay, essays on the lives of California artist Ruth Rippon and Swedish artist Hertha Hillfon, a dynamic discussion of contemporary motherhood, international perspectives from Canada, the United Kingdom, Turkey, and India, a look at fourth-wave feminism, and more.

Click for info onĀ Studio Potter.

Click to request complimentary issue online.

“Ruth Rippon, Her Story”
by Nancy M. Servis

Rippon’s artistic production is extensive and leaves an indelible mark on the artistic landscape of Northern California. …Ā The breadth of her work mirrors the artist herself: technically accomplished, experimental, conceptually grounded, and quietly emotive.

Click here for more.

Artist Salon – Nancy M. Servis
Wednesday, November 8
at 6–8:30 pm

Project Art
54 Main St, Cummington, Massachusetts 01026

Join visiting scholar, Nancy M. Servis, from Sacramento, California, for an image-illustrated presentation ‘State of Clay: Bay Area Ceramics,’ followed by a potluck at Project Art.

From pottery to sculptural expression, Servis unveils the dynamic variety of ceramics found in Northern California. Long recognized as a vital and populous state with extensive clay deposits, California has been the home of refined vessel-makers and artistic rule-breakers for over 75 years, particularly in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Her lecture contextualizes clay’s extensive use that includes stylistic architecture in Oakland, impassioned potters like Antonio Prieto and Marguerite Wildenhain from the 1950s, and unabashed practitioners like Peter Voulkos and Robert Arneson. They along with select others like Viola Frey, Ruth Rippon, and Ron Nagle laid Nancy Servis’ groundwork for what exists today – a population of fine artist-makers whose work coexists with those who embrace sculpture or even defy ceramic tradition.

Nancy is a recognized art historian, gallerist, and author. She has served as curator, educator and arts administrator in the greater San Francisco Bay Area for over twenty years.

Click for facebook page.

CHRIS ANTEMANN

CHRIS ANTEMANN

AVAILABLE ARTWORKS & SERIES


+ View Antemann’s Collaborations with Meissen HERE

FROM THE STUDIO


Work produced in Chris Antemann’s US studio, including installations in Museums

A Little Madness

Love in a Time of Chaos

Cameo

Embrace

Kissing Booth

Flames and Feathers I and II (A Pair of Tulip Vases)

Lovers Vase in Blue

FEATURED PAST INSTALLATIONS IN MUSEUMS


A Stage for Dessert

Dining in the Orangery

An Occasion to Gather

CHRIS ANTEMANN


ABOUT


American
b. 1970 Albany, NY
lives and works between Joseph, OR and Meissen, Germany

Chris Antemann is an American artist known for her frolicking, contemporary feminist parodies of 18th century porcelain figurines. For more than a decade, Antemann has worked collaboratively with the Meissen Porcelain Manufactory in Meissen, Germany to create increasingly ornate and elaborate variations on her lifelong love of the narrative, porcelain figurine. Recent years have seen a tremendous culmination of her time working with MEISSEN. Between 2015-2019, her large-scale installation Forbidden Fruit: Porcelain Sculptor Chris Antemann toured the US, Germany, and culminated at the State Hermitage Museum, Russia. In 2022, her largest, most complex sculpture to-date was unveiled at Hillwood Estate, Museum, & Gardens in Washington, DC; An Occasion to Gather reveals its sumptuous narrative across an eight-foot-long, four-foot-high dining room centerpiece. The relationship with MEISSEN continues and a decade of collaboration will be celebrated with an exhibition at the Meissen Porcelain Museum in Meissen, Germany from July 15, 2022 – February 26, 2023.

Antemann earned her MFA from the University of Minnesota and her BFA in Ceramics and Painting from Indiana University of Pennsylvania. She has exhibited extensively in the United States, Europe, Russia, and Asia. Her work can be found in many private and public collections, including the Crocker Art Museum, High Museum of Art, Museum of Arts and Design, the Portland Art Museum, among many others. Her awards include the Virginia A. Groot first prize, and residencies with the Archie Bray Foundation, the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, and the Sitka Center for Art and Ecology.

ON HER WORK

Inspired by 18th C. porcelain figurines, Chris Antemann’s work employs a unity of design and concept to simultaneously examine and parody male and female relationship roles. Characters, themes and incidents build upon each other, effectively forming their own language that speaks about domestic rites, social etiquette, and taboos. Themes from the classics and the romantics are given a contemporary edge; elaborate dinner parties, picnic luncheons and ornamental gardens set the stage for her twisted tales to unfold.

ON MEISSEN WORK

The pieces Chris is making in the Meissen Art Campus use the literary technique of a frame narrative, a story within a story, to build relationships and create layers of information between the sculptural aspects and the painted surfaces. The main story is presented in the guise of the 18th century porcelain figurine as a context, which frames a parody or second narrative between the sculpted characters. Other stories and in many cases, the sources of inspiration for the piece are painted into the scene in elaborate detail.

ON VIEW & UPCOMING


Chris Antemann: An Occasional Craving at the Dixon, Banner, 2025

RECENT/PAST EXHIBITIONS


HEY! CƉRAMIQUE.S

MusƩe de la Halle Saint Pierre | Paris, France
September 20, 2023 – August 14, 2024
Featuring Chris Antemann, Crystal Morey, & Mara Superior

REVIVE, REMIX, RESPOND

THE FRICK PITTSBURGH 7227 Reynolds St., Pittsburgh, PA February 17–May 27, 2018 ABOUT THE EXHIBITION In 2017, twenty contemporary artists were invited to respond to and produce new works that...

PUBLICATIONS


  • Released September 15, 2023
  • Edited by Anne Richard Bilingual (French / English)
  • 250 pages
  • Shaped cover 28 x 24.5 cm
  • Published by HEY! PUBLISHING

Long considered a minor art because of its particular status at the crossroads of art and craftsmanship, ceramics has emancipated itself artistically by making precisely this hybrid position the basis of its renewal. The truly alchemical dimension of the fire arts lends itself wonderfully to blurring and crossing boundaries.

HEY! CÉRAMIQUES Catalog Cover"HEY! CƉRAMIQUE.S" Musee de la Halle Saint Pierre, Paris, France, September 20, 2023 to August 14, 2024.

HEY! CÉRAMIQUES Catalog Cover “HEY! CƉRAMIQUE.S” Musee de la Halle Saint Pierre, Paris, France, September 20, 2023 to August 14, 2024.

NEWS & FEATURES


Chris Antemann in the 2023 Bray Benefit

Bray Benefit ONLINE Auction July 14 – July 21 Chris Antemann's work "Kissing Flora", straight from the artist's studio, will be part of the yearly fundraiser for The Archie Bray, in Helena...

NCECA PITTSBURGH

REVIVE, REMIX, RESPOND The Frick Pittsburgh 7227 Reynolds Street, Pittsburgh Group show of contemporary artists who are breathing new life into the ceramic medium by reinvigorating age-old motifs, processes, and...

Revive, Remix, Respond at The Frick Pittsburgh

Revive, Remix, Respond:Ā  Contemporary Ceramic Artists and The Frick Pittsburgh February 17–May 27, 2018 Revive, Remix, Respond Showcases contemporary artists who are breathing new life into the ceramic medium by...

VIDEOS FEATURING CHRIS ANTEMANN


Rebecca Tilles, curator, explores the porcelain collections of Consuelo Vanderbilt (1877-1964), Anna Thompson Dodge (1871-1970), and Marjorie Merriweather Post (1887-1973), Hillwood’s founder.

In this lecture celebrating the installation of two elaborate centerpieces in the dining and breakfast rooms as part of “The Luxury of Clay: Porcelain Past and Present,” artist Chris Antemann describes the development of her ceramic artwork inspired by eighteenth-century porcelain figures. She will discuss how she drew inspiration from Hillwood’s French parterre, porcelain collection, and interiors, as well as many other sources for her sculptural tableaux and complex process of constructing them. Learn how Chris crafts new narratives from historical forms, informed by her ten-year collaboration on unique and limited edition artworks with MEISSEN, Europe’s oldest porcelain manufactory.

INQUIRE


Additional works may be available to acquire, but not listed here.

If interested in lists of all works and series: Send us a message

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JACK EARL

JACK EARL WORK IN PRIVATE COLLECTIONS

Ferrin Contemporary is pleased to present select works for sale from private collections.
These collections offer an opportunity to acquire important works from surveys of studio sculpture and decorative art.

For more information and pricing on available artwork, please inquire

UNTITLED (ANOTHER BUSH, ANOTHER STICK OF WOOD)Ā 

MORNING DOG WALK

CEL 001 OHIO DOG

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EDWARD EBERLE

EDWARD EBERLE


AVAILABLE FROM PRIVATE COLLECTIONS


THE BATH

Edward Eberle

“The Bath”

1994, porcelain, terra sigillata, thrown, brush painted, sgraffito, 6.25″.

THE PRINCE'S RETINUE

Edward Eberle

ā€œThe Prince’s Retinueā€

1996, porcelain, 8.25 x 6″. photo: John Polak (Pennington)

Edward Eberle, photo courtesy of the Smithsonian American Art Museum

ABOUT

(B.1944, Tarentum, PA, lives and works in Pittsburgh, PA)

Edward Eberle has garnered wide recognition for work that combines narrative and geometric drawing with altered porcelain vessels. His wheel-thrown pieces are often covered with intricately detailed terra sigillata decoration or unadorned and assembled into figural, white porcelain sculptures that combine story with modified form.

Eberle has exhibited widely over the course of his career, including two one-man exhibitions at the Carnegie Museum of Art (1980, 1991) and one exhibition at the Columbus Museum of Art (1999). His work can be found in numerous private and public collections including the Carnegie Museum of Art (Pittsburgh, PA), Everson Museum (Syracuse, NY), Gardiner Museum (Toronto, ON), Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Los Angeles, CA), Museum of Fine Arts (Boston, MA), National Gallery of Australia, (Canberra, Australia), Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art (Kansas City, MO), Newark Museum of Art, (Newark, NJ), Philadelphia Museum of Art, (Philadelphia, PA), Racine Art Museum (Racine, WI), and Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington, D.C.).

Eberle received his BFA (1967) from Edinboro State College (Edinboro, PA) and MFA (1972) from Alfred University (Alfred, NY). He taught at the Philadelphia College of Art and at Carnegie-Mellon University (Philadelphia, PA) for a total of fourteen years. Eberle has established his practice in Pittsburgh, PA since 1985, with studios in Millvale (1985-2010) and Homestead (2012-present).

MORE ON EDWARD EBERLE

CURRENT + RECENT EXHIBITIONS

SELECT PAST EXHIBITIONS

EDWARD EBERLE: In Retrospect

This catalog was published by the Society for Contemporary Craft in support of Eberle’s 2016–2017 exhibits at:
Society for Contemporary Craft, Pittsburgh, PS
The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, PA
Houston Center for Contemporary Craft, Houston, TX

“The stories Eberle weaves may not necessarily correlate directly to his own experience, rather, draw upon universal mythologies and human psycho-dramas. The artist creates a humanitarian stage, unapologetically conveying involvement and detachment, self-expression and transcendence, stoicism and altruism.” — Peter Held

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