Project Tag: Ferrin Contemporary

AKIO TAKAMORI

AKIO TAKAMORI

AVAILABLE FROM COLLECTIONS

Works by Akio Takamori are available for sale, gift, or acquisition from Private Collections. For pricing and availability, please use the inquire form.

Teapot Kissing Figures in O shape

Akio Takamori


Lovers Vase

Akio Takamori


Sleeping Mother and Child

Akio Takamori


Akio Takamori

b. 1950, Nobeoka, Miyazaki, Japan
d.  2017, Seattle, WA

Takamori was a seminal figure in ceramic art, whose work over the past thirty years has left an enduring impact on the Pacific Northwest arts and the medium itself. His work is often autobiographical, drawing on his life in Japan, his family, and mythological themes. He is known for his coil-built figurative sculptures in which the narrative painting defines the form.  Takamori explored themes of cultural identity by engaging the history of Eastern and Western aesthetics. Bold form and color defines his body of work, which is highly expressive of human emotion and sensuality.

Akio Takamori was born and raised in Japan. He has been exhibiting in the United States, Europe and Asia since the mid 1980s. Takamori received his BFA from the Kansas City Art Institute in 1976 and his MFA from the New York State College of Ceramics, Alfred University in 1978.

Takamori’s work is included in numerous collections including the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Los Angels County Museum of Art, Victoria & Albert Museum in London, Ariana Museum in Geneva, the Seattle Art Museum, and the Museum of Arts and Design in New York City. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including three National Endowment for the Arts Visual Artists Fellowship Grants (1986, 1988, 1992), the Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters and Sculptors Grant (2006), and the USA Ford Fellowship (2011). Takamori was a professor of art at the University of Washington. He lived and worked in Seattle.

Read more on the James Harris website

PAUL SCOTT

PAUL SCOTT

HIGHLIGHTED ARTWORKS


New American Scenery Series

Paul Scott has produced multiple series, including his recently touring New American Scenery Series, in which many of the developing bodies of work are included.

Please check back regularly as we are correlating the artist’s statements with developing displays and informational pdfs.

As always, please inquire or contact us for more details or lists of available artworks.

PAUL SCOTT


ABOUT


English, b. 1953, 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.

Scott’s artworks can be found in public collections around the globe – 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 Guldagergård 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 2011–2018. Scott received his Bachelors of Art Education and Design at Saint Martin’s 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, here.

Paul Scott is represented by Ferrin Contemporary in the USA and The Scottish Gallery in Scotland.

ON HIS WORK


Paul Scott, "Cumbrian Blue(s), New American Scenery, Sampler Jug, No. 7 (After Stubbs)", 2021, transfer print collage on pearlware jug, 15 x 14 x 11.75". transfer print collage on pearlware jug designed by Paul Scott and Ed Bentley. Model made by Ed Bentley, fabricated by "Ceramics by Design", Longton, Stoke on Trent, England The inside, ‘Cumbrian Blue(s), New American Scenery, Sampler Jug No:7, (After Stubbs)'. Decal collage on pearlware jug, 390mm x 350mm x 50mm. Paul Scott 2021 transferware; blue & white; pearlware; Cumbrian Blue(s); sampler; Stubbs; Black Lives Matter Protests; Police riot; New American Scenery; collage; decal; pearlware; Paul Scott; Joseph Stubbs; Detroit Ghost gardens; Angola 3: Pipelines and Peltier; Standing Rock; Belle Island; Cape Coast Castle; Portland; Selma; Uranium

Paul Scott, "Cumbrian Blue(s), New American Scenery, Broken Treaties, Standing Rock, After Ryan Vizzions, with Mega Mae Plenty Chief, Lakota Oyate on horseback, No. 3", 2022, transfer print collage on Wm Penn's Treaty transferware plate by Thomas Goodwin c.1835, 10.5 x 10.5 x 1.25". Red, blue, and white transferware plate, with updated decal imagery of Standing Rock, ND. The imagery is of Mega Mae Plenty Chief, a Lakota Oyate on horseback, posed in front of the police and military present and opposing. They are the single figure if front of the entire army presence, signifying the resistance to drilling for oil in the US on Native American Lands. Subject matter for the artwork includes the following artist series: New American Scenery, Native American, Antique, Energy, Environment, Race, Indigeneity

Paul Scott, a material-based conceptual artist, creates ceramic work that blurs the boundaries between art, craft, and design. With a penchant for rescuing cast-offs, he restores them to a new life by using them as a canvas for biting social commentary. His work tells stories that explore the unexpected movement of images through materials, media, cultures, politics, histories, and geographies, inviting us to see these objects in a new way.

Scott is an authority on printed vitreous surfaces. His research, artwork, and book, Ceramics in Print, has been instrumental in the phenomenal growth of printmaking techniques in contemporary ceramics.

Scott’s latest book, Horizon: Transferware and Contemporary Ceramics, co-edited with Knut Astrup Bull, explores the complex journey of ideas and images to their realization in blue and white, then multicoloured tablewares. Blending historical enquiry with contemporary practice, the book illustrates how artists re-appropriate this historical genre. Text and visual essays explore unexpected political and cultural themes, changing the way we view these familiar objects.

In the fall of 2013, Scott, a resident of the UK, traveled in the US, visiting museum collections of transferware and participating in artist residencies at the Clay Studio in Philadelphia and Project Art in Massachusetts. His series, New American Scenery, presents a striking duality with current American imagery applied to antique china pieces that brings the past forward, exposes us to how we have shaped our landscape, and hints at what the future may hold.

Scott embarked on a new body of work in 2014 that involves the physical collaging of antique fragments using traditional ceramic conservation methods to join the elements. The mending, melding, and juxtaposition of the separate components creates completely new work, proving, again, that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.

Scott’s work can be found in public and private collections around the globe.

Ferrin Contemporary represents Scott in the US. His work can be viewed online at FerrinContemporary.com, at Project Art in Cummington, MA, and at various venues in the US.

NEW AMERICAN SCENERY


NAS | GUIDE

In New American Scenery, Scott scrutinizes the American landscape from a contemporary perspective, one that grapples with issues of globalization, energy generation and consumption, capitalism, social justice, immigration, and the human impact on the environment. The images that Scott creates for his ceramics depict unsettling views of nuclear power plants, aging urban centers, abandoned industrial sites, wildfires, and isolating walls. As representations of the American landscape, they suggest a subversion of the picturesque aesthetic—the unpicturesque picturesque—and a new, disturbing norm.

“NAS” includes the following bodies of work, many of which were conceived on location and/or with insights from significant collaborators. Each title below represents a sub-series containing multiple iterations and/or designs: American Cities & Landscapes, Broken Treaties, Energy & Environment, Posy Vases, Race, Indigeneity & Immigration, Samplers, Sampler Jugs, Souvenirs, Views of New York.

Click the Artworks Tab on the left to learn more about each series.

NEW AMERICAN SCENERY IN THE US


Visit these museums in the US that have recently acquired work
from Scott’s American Scenery series.

Crocker Art Museum
Birmingham Museum of Art
Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
RISD Museum
Boston MFA
Brooklyn Museum
Newark Museum
Carnegie Museum of Art
Mount Holyoke Art Museum
Chipstone Foundation

IN PUBLIC COLLECTIONS


ADDITIONAL US COLLECTIONS

Alturas Foundation, San Antonio, TX
Arizona State University Art Museum, Tempe, AZ
Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston MA
Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham, AL
Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, PA
Chipstone Foundation, Milwaukee, WI
Copeland Borough Council Collection, Oregon College of Art and Craft Collection, Portland, OR
Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA
Denison University, Granville, OH
Kohler Company, Kohler, WI
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA
Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, Montgomery, AL
Mount Holyoke College Art Museum, South Hadley, MA
New York Historical Society, New York, NY
Newark Art Museum, Newark, NJ
Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, MA
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pennsylvania, PA
RISD Museum, Providence, RI
Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC

SELECT SERIES STATEMENTS

“New American Scenery, Visitors to America”

The visitor, the stranger, the foreigner in a new land, encountering things that are both very familiar and yet disorienting….

I follow a tradition, a long line of visitors to America who’ve written about and depicted thecountry.

READ MORE/VIEW PDF

“New American Scenery, the Background….”

Transferware:

In the late 18th century, blue and white Staffordshire transferwares were developed to imitate painted Chinese export porcelains. By the early 19th century printed patterns had expanded to include images of the Grand Tour and of Empire. A particular dark blue version of the genre became popular in the United States, & from Liverpool, Staffordshire potters exported huge quantities of decorated wares depicting American subjects & landscape. Later that century these were to become highly collectible. … “.

READ MORE/VIEW PDF

“New American Scenery, Cape Coast Castle….”

This has a direct link to toppled Bristol statue of slave trader Edward Colston of the Royal African Company (1680 – 1692)… Its administration centre was Cape Coast Castle in current day Ghana. Commenting on the UK’s Black Lives Matter protests in the wake of George Floyd’s death on BBC Newsnight, Aliyah Hasinah explained how the UK has ‘had a longer time to marinate racism, to deeply entrench it through the use of scientific racism, eugenics, art, culture, business, politics, policies… In the same TV programme American actor Clark Peters talked about UK racism being ‘cloaked in beautiful language’.

Characterised by a dark blue palette of extraordinary depth & subtlety blue and white transferware was part of the ‘new media’ of its day… huge quantities of pictorial Staffordshire wares were exported to the US in early 19th century.… This platter is a perfect exemplar of the cloaking of racist history in ‘beautiful’ form… The original source of Enoch Wood’s transferware design was an engraving by John Hill (1806) after a painting by George Webster (1799), commissioned by HRH the Duke of Clarence as part of a campaign against abolitionists.. This platter was from a series of marine views made exclusively for US market.… In the original images both ships and castle flags were British, but Woods’ ‘slaver’ sails under Stars & Stripes.

READ MORE/VIEW PDF

UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS


Recall. Reframe. Respond. The Art of Paul Scott Banner

Recall. Reframe. Respond. The Art of Paul Scott

Solo Exhibition | Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, OH

October 10, 2025 – January 4, 2026

ALL EXHIBITIONS


CLAYSCAPES

Everson Museum of Art | Syracuse, NY
April 13 – October 20, 2024
Featuring Cristina Córdova, Paul Scott, & Steven Young Lee

VIDEOS

Video: LSU LECTURE | “Cumbrian Blue(s): New American Scenery, Transferwares for the 21st Century” Sunday, November 16, 5:00 pm Paul Scott, ceramics artist, will give a Paula G. Manship Endowed Lecture to the College of Art & Design on Wednesday, November 16, 2022 at 5:00 p.m. in 103 Design Building Auditorium.

LECTURE | “Cumbrian Blue(s): New American Scenery, Transferwares for the 21st Century”

Sunday, November 16, 5:00 pm

Paul Scott, ceramics artist, was invited to speak through the Paula G. Manship Endowed Lecture Program at the College of Art & Design on Wednesday, November 16, 2022 at 5:00 p.m. in 103 Design Building Auditorium.

LEARN MORE

WATCH THE RECORDING OF THE LECTURE

HIDDEN IN PLAIN SIGHT: ILLUSTRATED CERAMICS AND AMERICAN IDENTITY

Panelists: Leslie Ferrin, Elizabeth Alexander, Jacqueline Bishop, Judy Chartrand, Niki Johnson, and Paul Scott.

Hidden in plain sight, illustrations on porcelain and ceramic ware have, throughout history, transformed functional objects into message-bearers for a wide range of political and propagandistic causes, whether exchanged by heads of state or acquired for use or display in domestic settings. Leslie Ferrin of Ferrin Contemporary will discuss the imagery, drawn from popular nineteenth-century prints, that was reproduced on widely distributed ceramics portraying historical events, indigenous people, and notable explorers, inventors, and politicians through a white European lens. The panel will explore how these seemingly ordinary objects, including Rockwell collector plates, have helped to establish firmly held beliefs about American identity. Artists Elizabeth Alexander, Jacqueline Bishop, Judy Chartrand, Niki Johnson, and Paul Scott, will discuss contemporary ceramics, which reject systems of racial oppression and invite reconsideration of the sanitized version of history that was presented for generations.

View Hidden in Plain Sight: Illustrated Ceramics and American Identity

PAUL SCOTT New American Scenery | Plate engraving with Paul Scott and Paul Holdway

October 13, 2021. Produced by The Bowes Museum. Ceramic artist Paul Scott tells us more about his collaboration with former SPODE engraver, Paul Holdway. Part of the New American Scenery Project.

View Plate engraving with Paul Scott and Paul Holdway

ARTIST TALK | MELTING POINT: RISING WATERS with Courtney M. Leonard, Paul Scott, and Norwood Viviano, moderated by Jami Powell

September 15, 2021. Ferrin Contemporary Curator Conversation featuring artists Courtney M. Leonard, Paul Scott, and Norwood Viviano. Moderated by Jami Powell, Ph.D., Curator of Indigenous Art, Hood Museum, Dartmouth University (Hanover, NH).

View Artist Talk | MELTING POINT: Rising Waters

FOUNDERS’ HOUR FEATURING Paul Scott with Leslie Ferrin & Brian Gallagher

June 11, 2021 | The Mint Museum’s Founders’ Circle is pleased to present their first ever International Founders’ Hour featuring UK-based artist, Paul Scott. From his studio in Cumbria, Scott creates contemporary versions of traditional blue and white transferware ceramics, updating this historic media for the 21st century. Scott’s work engages political and social issues that resonate with our lives today, questioning the cultural history of transferware ceramics in the dissemination of national ideas and settler-centric narratives.

View Founders’ Hour featuring Paul Scott with Leslie Ferrin & Brian Gallagher

FERRIN CONTEMPORARY IN CONVERSATION: RAID THE ICEBOX NOW with Elizabeth Williams, Beth Katleman, and Paul Scott

June 7, 2021 | For the 50th anniversary of Andy Warhol’s Raid the Icebox exhibition, RISD Museum invited eight contemporary artists and collectives to mine the museum, taking inspiration from objects or incorporating objects into new installations that reconsider how collections can be reimagined.

View Ferrin Contemporary in Conversation: Raid the Icebox Now with Elizabeth Williams, Beth Katleman, and Paul Scott

CATALOGS


‘Raid the Ice Box Now’ Digital Catalog

  • Produced by the Rhode Island School of Design Museum, 2019
  • To celebrate the 50th anniversary of its exhibition Raid the Icebox I with Andy Warhol, the RISD Museum is engaging contemporary artists and designers Pablo Bronstein, Nicole Eisenman, Pablo Helguera, Beth Katleman, Simone Leigh, Sebastian Ruth, Paul Scott, and Triple Canopy to create new bodies of work or create a unique curatorial project using the museum as a site for critical, creative production and presentation. Employing the galleries and digital platforms as well as spaces beyond the museum walls, these artists will question dominant narratives and highlight the strengths and idiosyncrasies of the museum’s collection, which includes more than 100,000 works spanning ancient times to the present. A landmark example of artist-curated museum exhibitions, Raid the Icebox I with Andy Warhol (1970) presented entire sections of objects as they appeared in storage, with little or no connoisseurial regard for their condition, authenticity, or art historical status. It remains one of the most celebrated and subversive exhibitions in contemporary art history.
  • Raid the Icebox Now is made possible by a lead grant from the National Endowment for the Arts with additional support from the RISD Museum Associates, Judy and Robert Mann, Taylor Box Company, and a generous in-kind gift from Meyer Sound Laboratories.

View ‘Raid the Ice Box Now’ Digital Catalog

SELECT PRESS & ARTIST NEWS

Recent Features

GREAT BRITISH LIFE

Ceramic artist Paul Scott on his work and exhibitions

Cumbria Life September 2025

The most enjoyable thing I do, without doubt, is realising art works. The big jug I did last year for the Confected, Borrowed and Blue exhibition at the Shelburne Museum in Vermont was typical of what I do: researching a particular institution or collection and then creating a response to it. At the moment, there are two pieces in particular that I’m working on – two pieces for the Cincinnati which I still haven’t quite resolved. But I know what will happen: as soon as I start collaging, it will fall into place. In order to do that, I’ve done about a year’s worth of research, but I’ve learned that if I just follow the processes, eventually the old brain cells and ideas will catch up with it.

VIEW ARTICLE

ART DAILY

Renowned British artist Paul Scott on view at Shelburne Museum

Art Daily July 2024
Shelburne Museum

SHELBURNE, VT. – Shelburne Museum presents the work of renowned British artist Paul Scott in the exhibition Confected, Borrowed & Blue: Transferware by Paul Scott that includes provocative reinterpretations of 19th-century transferware from Shelburne Museum’s permanent collection along with a work commissioned for the exhibition.

VIEW ARTICLE

SEVEN DAYS

Paul Scott’s Provocative Ceramics Reinvent Transferware Traditions

Seven Days June 19, 2024
Article by Pamela Polston 

A recently opened exhibition at Shelburne Museum, titled “Confected, Borrowed & Blue,” presents a selection of the internationally known British artist’s transferware updated for modern times.

VIEW ARTICLE

Financial Times

“Politics on a plate: how ceramics became a tool for satire and protest”

Financial Times March 15, 2024
Article by

A new exhibition celebrates the ‘Trojan horse’ of the decorative arts

VIEW MORE/VIEWPDF

Ceramics Now

“The magician’s trick”

Ceramics Now September/October 2022
Article by Ellen Bell

Ellen Bell reviews Paul Scott’s latest exhibition, a new collection of blue and white transferware that feture hard-hitting political messages on American history
“A mastercalss in blue and white transferware, Scott’s new collection is also a bravura performance in sleight of hand….For things are not as they seem…

VIEW MORE/VIEW PDF.

The Guardian

Traditional china serving up the big issues of today in pictures

Blue and white transferware plates were hugely popular in the 19th century for their bucolic pastoral scenes. Over the past 30 years, artist Paul Scott, who lives in Cumbria, has updated the medium to address some very modern issues: the climate emergency, the refugee crisis, tensions in the Middle East.

VIEW MORE/VIEW POST

“On the Threshold: Paul Scott New American Scenery”

Essay by Jo Dahn

When he began to experiment with printing on ceramics Paul Scott soon found himself in liminal territory: his creative practice was becoming unclassifiable. ‘In those days’, he has said, ‘there was no-one around me who was doing anything remotely similar, but that’s a double-edged sword: it launches you into a no-man’s-land, because you’re not a painter or a fine art printmaker and you’re not a potter or a craftsperson … In a way I enjoyed it immensely because I was doing things that people hadn’t seen before.’

READ MORE/VIEW PDF

 “Exhibition | ‘Home Truths,’ Paul Scott’s Brutal Blue and White Porcelain Plates”

Cfile.Capsule

Re-purposing these cultural artifacts in such a way as to offer new narrative interpretations that encourage re-examination. Drawing from his encyclopedic knowledge of and fascination with the material, he alters, erases and adds new images to the intricately detailed scenes and patterns of these domestic items, whereby the imagery is ruptured and recalibrated for a contemporary world. Scott’s interventions enable him to explore a range of issues from ecology to the refugee crisis.

READ MORE/VIEW ONLINE

“Paul Scott’s Confected Landscapes and Contemporary Vignettes”

Essay by Amy Gogarty

The work disccussed in this article relates to reasearch conducted during the course of his PhD, yet it embodies themes that have preoccupied him for some time. These include theories of picturesque landscape painting; the remediation and circulation in print form of such painting; domestic ceramic objects printed with landscape imagery and a host of contemporary issues concerning relationships between human civilization and the natural world.

READ MORE/VIEW PDF

Sorry, no posts were found.

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

Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

BOBBY SILVERMAN

BOBBY SILVERMAN

ARTWORKS & INSTALLATIONS

NEW WORK

VASE FORMS

VASE TILE SETS

BOBBY SILVERMAN


Bobby Silverman, Artist Portrait, 2022. Photo by Nate Bozeman

ABOUT


American, b. 1956, Port Jefferson, NY
works in Brooklyn, NY

Bobby Silverman is an American artist known for his contemporary design in ceramics. 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 originated 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. These ideas are presented through words, letterforms, coded symbols, color, and texture. His work explores influences from Cuneiform tablets, Arabic calligraphy, Braille, the Ancient Greek poems of Sappho, and the writings of French philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty.

Silverman has received fellowships from the Louisiana State Council for the Arts, National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council for the Arts, and the Southern Arts Federation/National Endowment of the Arts Fellowship. Silverman has exhibited internationally and his work is held in many private and public collections including the Museum of Arts and Design (New York, NY), the European Ceramic Workcenter (Oisterwijk, Netherlands), The Museum of Fine Arts (New York, NY), and the Renwick Gallery of The Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington, D.C.).

Silverman earned his MFA from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University, his BFA from the Kansas City Art Institute, and his BA in Social Geography from Clark University Worcester. Silverman has taught and lectured in China, the U.S., Europe, and the Middle East. He is currently the Director of the Ceramics Center at the 92nd St. Y in New York City.

ON HIS WORK

My work explores the idiosyncratic nature of ceramic material and its ability to express phenomenological properties including luminosity, translucency, gravity, and reflection. I am primarily interested in how the ceramic surface relates to ideas about abstraction or natural phenomena such as how the static can be made fluid or how a physical surface can seem to have infinite depth. My work develops from the outside in—the surface quality is paramount and the form is chosen to highlight that surface. Most recently, I have begun to add other materials to the mix: cast resin, glass, and automotive paint are used as static counterpoints to the glaze and to extend my conversation about the inherent quality of different materials.

The phenomenological and the material are two of my top studio concerns, yet they are also in service to my primary goal: communication. Material communicates, of course, but often I use literal forms of communication to develop a surface. Cuneiform tablets, Arabic calligraphy, Braille, the Ancient Greek poems of Sappho, and the writings of French philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty all influence or appear directly in my work.

Robert Silverman, “Untitled Triptych” 2014, re-fired commercial tile fabricated in Jingdezhen, China, 36 x 28 x 1.5″ (each).

ON HIS TILE WORK

Bobby Silverman’s brilliantly-glazed, large-scale porcelain tiles begin as raw clay in China, where ceramic tradition dates back hundreds of years. Working with expert craftsman, Silverman designed a paper-thin flat tile up to 43 x 33”, which is in itself a technical achievement. The blank tile is fabricated in Jingdezhen, China, fired to a high temperature, crated, and shipped to his studio in the United States. Silverman then masterfully glazes the porcelain and fires it numerous times in his kiln to create a visual language of pure color, vivid striping, or abstract text using Morse code or braille. Because Silverman makes his masterful understanding of the chemistry of ceramics look effortless, the viewer sees a pristine, vibrant work of art that is reminiscent of color field painting, but resonates with a color and light that only glaze can achieve.

CURRENT + RECENT EXHIBITIONS

BOBBY SILVERMAN: NEW WORK

2022 | Ferrin Contemporary | North Adams, MA

As an object maker, my primary focus has always been on materials and process. My work starts from the surface and the form follows suit. I throw forms that best articulate the unusual palette of glazes and surface finishes that I continually develop. By using a variety of materials, firing temperatures with repeat firings, and many layers of glaze, I have developed my own unique surface language.

Recently, I began adding other materials to the mix including cast resin, glass, chrome, and automotive paint. These additional materials possess their own specific properties that complement and illuminate ceramic surfaces. This approach allows me to investigate the idiosyncratic nature of ceramic materials and its phenomenological properties such as luminosity, translucency, gravity, and reflection.

— Bobby Silverman

MELTING POINT & ARTIST FEATURE

2021 Group Exhibition | Ferrin Contemporary | North Adams, MA & Heller Gallery | New York, NY

Solo Feature | The Porches Inn | North Adams, MA

VASES

TILES

BOWLS

F(E)FF (EVERSON)

2016 Installation | Featured in the Everson Biennial | Everson Museum of Art | Syracuse, NY

ON ONE OF HIS INFLUENCES

We know not through our intellect but through our experience. ― Maurice Merleau-Ponty

Unlike other philosophers, Merleau-Ponty emphasized the body as well as the mind as a gateway to understanding the world. His belief that the body and that which it perceived could not be separated seems perfectly suited to the perceptual and haptic sensibilities of fired clay.
I was initially trained as a social geographer and later as an artist. Acknowledging this early training and reflecting the mind-body understanding, my current work connects the way in which we both visualize information and viscerally experience this process of perception.

TIRANA

2015 Installation | Featured in GLAZED & DIFFUSED | Group Exhibition | Ferrin Contemporary | North Adams, MA

ON TIRANA

In October 2000, artist Eddie Rama became the Mayor of Tirana, Albania. At that time the capital city was a downtrodden remnant of the Soviet Union. The city budget was squandered, corruption was rampant and crime was the norm. But Rama had an idea to raise the spirits of his town — he painted many of the grey buildings loud colors and bold designs.
When the colored buildings began to multiply, a mood of change started to transform the spirit of the people. There was less litter in the streets, people started to pay taxes. As Rama said “Beauty was giving people a feeling of being protected. This was not a misplaced feeling — crime did fall.”
Inspired by Rama’s vision, I use everyday commercial tile and glaze materials to create surfaces and imagery that blur the traditional lines drawn between art, design and architecture. In doing this I hope to elevate everyday materials and give them meaning beyond their manufactured intent.

CURRENT + RECENT

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

Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

MARA SUPERIOR

MARA SUPERIOR

AVAILABLE ARTWORKS & SERIES

“Artists can actualize tangible objects which address the frustrations that we commonly feel. In ceramics, there is a long, historic tradition of political commentary. Themes that pique our visual outcries range from canaries in the coal mine to thinking about citizenship, American and world history, power, democracy and the value and vulnerability of freedom. Since the invention of the printing press, drawings of political satire and humor have been used to inform and get a message out to the population. 17th and 18th century British and French political satire, as well as comic art and prints by James Gilroy and William Hogarth changed thinking with brilliant wit equaling high art. Goya, Daumier, Picasso, the Gorilla Girls, and today’s New Yorker Magazine covers by Barry Blit come to mind as artists make political-commentary in reaction to their times.”

— Mara Superior

The Pursuit of Happiness

Democracy/Come Together/Mend/Repair

“A forever optimist, I remain hopeful that the majority of Americans will be able to sort through the semantics, scrambling of the truth and reality and make common sense political decisions, spread the word, and use their privilege to vote

This piece is a visual representation of a divided democracy, literally being sewn back together with golden thread, an ancient Japanese Kintsugi Gold leaf repair, and porcelain buttons, in hopes of keeping it together.”

I Want to Go Home!/Lady Liberty

“The “Statue of Liberty”, (officially named, “Liberty Enlightening the World) is an inspiring globally recognized iconic monument symbolizing the United States. She arrived in the New York Harbor in 1886. A gift from France commemorating the centennial of the United States Declaration of Independence.

Lady Liberty symbolizes the ideals of liberty, human rights, abolition of slavery, democracy, hope, and opportunity. She welcomes visitors, immigrants, and returning Americans traveling by ship.

Frederic Bartholdi sculpted the colossal statue based on the Greek goddess of liberty, Eleutheria, who had a temple on the Avertine Hill in Rome since c. 238 B.C.

My depiction of Lady Liberty who has been hit by lightning, thousands of times is ready to go back to her beloved homeland, La Belle, France!”

2020/USA/Vote/America

Who is in Charge, America?

Presidential Cups

Mara Superior’s passion for Art History and the History of the Decorative Arts has informed her work throughout her career. She seeks to create beauty through the reinterpretation of historical inspirations synthesized with her own visual vocabulary and contemporary views. The idiosyncratic visual language that Superior has been cultivating over decades is largely rooted in porcelain but encompasses painting, art history, ceramic history, and contemporary art. Works in this series juxtapose art historical references beginning with the Egyptians through 17th-century European ceramics from a contemporary viewpoint. The resulting objects are rooted in the historical continuum.

The Nymph of Spring (After Lucas Cranach)

Teapot of Survival (Portland Vase)

Birth of Venus (After Sandro Botticelli)

My piece in Ferrin Contemporary’s exhibition Nature/Nurture, Only One Planet Earth, is a commentary on the current predicament mankind is facing — Climate Change — and what to do about it. I can only hope that this universally shared crisis will bring out the best in us and bring humanity together to find remedies.”

— Mara Superior, 2020

Only One Planet Earth

Le Do Do

Polar Distress

The Ice is Melting, (Five-finger Vase)

Mara Superior’s House & Garden Series highlights the landscape, architecture, and lifestyle of New England. The artworks display the depth of influence that living in the area has had on the artist’s aesthetic, and range from teapots, to relief tiles and platters.

Our House

Summer House (June Platter)

Watching the Sea (A Dream Platter)

My Winter House (A Dream House)

A Dream House Dreaming

Largest Heart Platter

My Lobster

In Superior’s Blue Series, she highlights the cobalt blue and white ceramic tradition that began in China and was the inspiration and foundation of porcelain work in Europe and across the globe. Some of her Blue Series pieces use the classic visual themes and icons of early Chinese blue and white export porcelain, such as waterscapes, pagodas, mountains, and bridges. In other pieces, she uses the cobalt blue and white palette to paint western scenes similar to those found in her multicolored work. Every time she uses cobalt blue, she connects a dot back to the Chinese blue and white tradition and positions herself as a continuation of that tradition in the history of porcelain.

Let the Sun Shine on Moi

MARA SUPERIOR


ABOUT


American, b. 1951, New York, NY
lives and works in Williamsburg, MA

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 the 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). In 2018, through the generous support of the Kohler Foundation, gifts of art by Mara Superior were made to fifteen museums throughout the USA, increasing the public holdings of Superior’s artworks  and including an in depth collection acquired by the Racine Art Museum, (Racine, WI) and shown in 2020 in Collection Focus: Mara Superior. 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.

Portrait of the Artist with ”The Nymph of Spring (After Lucas Cranach)”, 2021,
high-fired porcelain, ceramic oxides and underglazes, gold leaf, epoxy, digital print, 12.5 x 18.5 x 1.5″.
Photo by John Polak Photography

STATEMENTS FROM THE ARTIST

ON ART HISTORY

“My passion for Art History and the History of the Decorative Arts has informed my work throughout my career. I seek to create beauty through the reinterpretation of historical inspirations synthesized with my own visual vocabulary and contemporary views. The resulting objects are rooted in the historical continuum.”

ON HER PAINTING BACKGROUND

ON PORCELAIN

ON HER AESTHETIC

ON HER CAREER

 

Mara Superior, ”The Nymph of Spring (After Lucas Cranach)”, 2021, high-fired porcelain, ceramic oxides and underglazes, gold leaf, epoxy, digital print, 12.5 x 18.5 x 1.5″.

Mara Superior: Chronicling our Collective Hopes
By Lauren Levato Coyne, MFA, artist & writer

Superior’s works often reference the Renaissance, though she herself is akin to a medieval chronicler, a documentarian using stylized drawings (or sculptures in Superior’s case) and fanciful flourishes with a personalized spin to relay current events in an approachable manner. Superior’s high-relief porcelain works directly engage with our current socio-political moments while retaining hope for our collective future. Her whimsical storytelling pulls the threads of shared cultural histories in an attempt to activate our better angels.”

CLICK TO VIEW HEY! CERAMIQUE.S CATALOG, FEATURING THE FULL ARTICLE

Mara Superior, "Let the Sun Shine on Moi", 2022, English porcelain, cobalt oxide, gold luster, glaze, 11 x 14.25 x .5"

Mara Superior, “Let the Sun Shine on Moi”, 2022, English porcelain, cobalt oxide, gold luster, glaze, 11 x 14.25 x .5″

ON HER BLUE SERIES

In Superior’s Blue Series, she highlights the cobalt blue and white ceramic tradition that began in China and was the inspiration and foundation of porcelain work in Europe and across the globe. Some of her Blue Series pieces use the classic visual themes and icons of early Chinese blue and white export porcelain, such as waterscapes, pagodas, mountains, and bridges. In other pieces, she uses the cobalt blue and white palette to paint western scenes similar to those found in her multicolored work. Every time she uses cobalt blue, she connects a dot back to the Chinese blue and white tradition and positions herself as a continuation of that tradition in the history of porcelain.

— Mara Superior

Mara Superior, “2020/USA/Vote/America”, 2019, high-fired porcelain, ceramic oxides, underglaze, glaze, ceramic decals, gold leaf, 13 x 16.25 x 2″.

ON HER POLITICAL & ENVIRONMENTAL SERIES

Artists can actualize tangible objects which address the frustrations that we commonly feel. In ceramics, there is a long, historic tradition of political commentary. Themes that pique our visual outcries range from canaries in the coal mine to thinking about citizenship, American and world history, power, democracy and the value and vulnerability of freedom. Since the invention of the printing press, drawings of political satire and humor have been used to inform and get a message out to the population. 17th and 18th century British and French political satire, as well as comic art and prints by James Gilroy and William Hogarth changed thinking with brilliant wit equaling high art. Goya, Daumier, Picasso, the Gorilla Girls, and today’s New Yorker Magazine covers by Barry Blit come to mind as artists make political-commentary in reaction to their times.

Mara Superior, “Only One Planet Earth”, 2019, high-fired porcelain, ceramic oxides, underglaze, glaze, gold leaf, 16 x 16 x 1.5”.

ON NATURE/NURTURE

“I was nurtured and encouraged to develop my imagination by my family and art teachers all the way through graduate school. Further enrichment came by way of my extraordinary good fortune to have been married to Roy Superior, a wonderful Artist and Professor of Art.

Over the course of my career, ceramics, art schools, museum curators and society have evolved to become more inclusive. Barriers have disintegrated, and currently, it feels as if ceramics is female-empowered given that so many of the magazine editors, gallerists and many curators are women.

For my entire professional career, I have been blessed to have only one brilliant and visionary female art dealer, Leslie Ferrin, of Ferrin Contemporary. Leslie has always encouraged my best work, offered me opportunities, and given me valued professional advice.

The choices that I employ regarding my own work for materials, content, palette and ornament might, by historical standards, be considered feminine work by nature. That label has never been a hindrance to me. I have had a very privileged life and career as an artist and am grateful for it all.

My piece in Ferrin Contemporary’s exhibition Nature/Nurture, Only One Planet Earth, is a commentary on the current predicament mankind is facing — Climate Change — and what to do about it. I can only hope that this universally shared crisis will bring out the best in us and bring humanity together to find remedies.”

Mara Superior, “Mother Nature Says, ‘Wake Up'” 2010, porcelain, glaze, wood, pearls, gold leaf, 17 x 22 x 2″.

DIRECTOR NOTES ON MARA SUPERIOR

In the works presented in Nature/Nurture, Superior’s political views are expressed front and center. The large-scale porcelains use the format of Renaissance-era storytelling platters with wide-rimmed borders functioning as frames. Carefully placed medallions and miniature objects in relief are emblazoned with messages delivered in delicately, hand-painted, calligraphic, heavily-laden serif fonts. Whether she is channeling mother nature or calling on higher powers to impact the coming election, Superior speaks loudly in large, all caps type, using the language of decorative arts to shout her beliefs in beauty and humanity’s inherent goodness.

Originally a New Yorker, Mara has been living and working in Western Massachusetts since the 70’s. Her life and work are an ode to Western culture. While embracing traditional values of home and beauty, her work is from a modern perspective with a feminist nod to sensuality and pleasure. Whenever possible, she spends leisure time wandering the museums of the world in person. But, now, quarantined at home, she is touring these museums virtually, attending online classes, watching zoom lectures, and enjoying her vast library of gorgeous art books. She shares these moments along with the slow progress of painting her next work All American on her Instagram feed.

Superior met Leslie Ferrin at the beginning of her career. Both were in school, Mara at UMASS in the MAT program, Leslie at Hampshire College. Mara’s husband, Roy Superior, was Ferrin’s professor. They shared studios as artists, founding Pinch Pottery in Northampton, followed by East Street Clay Studios (Hadley, MA). Their intertwined, four-decade-long careers have weathered many changes and challenges over 40 years. Roy passed away in 2013, truly a renaissance man, an artist, sculptor, musician and beloved professor for 40 years spending 16 years at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. Mara continues to live in the New England farmhouse they slowly renovated together, surrounded by the furniture he built to hold her works, his drawings, their library and his “wunderkammer” collections. The studio filled with hand made, hand tools, is still intact.

Superior’s artwork features ideas gleaned from research and travel, uniting all her interests in thematic approaches to specific content. Like her exuberant country garden, her work is always a beautiful mix of heirlooms and hybrids, free-ranging and grafts that come from strong rootstock. Her mashup mix of source material is delivered as stylized interpretations through images and didactic text. Using a combination of folk traditions, references to the classics of Western art, she infuses not so veiled socio-political messages from a contemporary perspective. Her deep love of ancient Greek, Roman, Asian antiquities, European and Early American pottery and ceramics – these objects become the subject matter of collection platters that feature miniature versions of her coveted favorites.

ON VIEW & RECENT EXHIBITIONS


Porcelain Love Letters Banner

PORCELAIN LOVE LETTERS: The Art of Mara Superior

Shelburne Museum
Shelburne, VT

Mara Superior’s porcelain art combines intricate painted imagery and sculptural forms to explore themes of art history, domesticity, and environmentalism. Often described as “love letters to the world,” Superior’s works invite viewers to engage with their timeless beauty and layered narratives. 

May 10 – October 26, 2025

PORTLAND VASE: MANIA AND MUSE

Crocker Art Museum
Sacramento, CA

The Portland Vase: Mania and Muse asks why and how a singular Classical vase becomes a legend, an “influencer,” and an artistic and commercial muse across time and place.

July 9, 2024 – September 15, 2024

CURRENT + RECENT EXHIBITIONS


NEWS


Sorry, no posts were found.

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! CÉRAMIQUE.S" Musee de la Halle Saint Pierre, Paris, France, September 20, 2023 to August 14, 2024.

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

 

Mara Superior, ”The Nymph of Spring (After Lucas Cranach)”, 2021, high-fired porcelain, ceramic oxides and underglazes, gold leaf, epoxy, digital print, 12.5 x 18.5 x 1.5″.

Mara Superior: Chronicling our Collective Hopes
By Lauren Levato Coyne, MFA, artist & writer

Superior’s works often reference the Renaissance, though she herself is akin to a medieval chronicler, a documentarian using stylized drawings (or sculptures in Superior’s case) and fanciful flourishes with a personalized spin to relay current events in an approachable manner. Superior’s high-relief porcelain works directly engage with our current socio-political moments while retaining hope for our collective future. Her whimsical storytelling pulls the threads of shared cultural histories in an attempt to activate our better angels.”

CLICK TO VIEW HEY! CERAMIQUE.S CATALOG, FEATURING THE FULL ARTICLE

Collection Focus: Mara Superior at RAM

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.

Preview the Exhibition Catalog  •  HERE  •

Exhibition Notes (PDF)

A Conversation with Mara Superior and Bruce W. Pepich, Unabridged (PDF)

Further information about the artist:

Mara Superior’s Website

Review by Angela Fina from the Exhibitions section of American Ceramics, Volume 7, Number 2, 1989 (PDF)

Oral History Interview with Mara Superior—Archives of American Art

Artist Spotlight from a 2018 Exhibition at The Frick Pittsburgh

Collection Focus: Mara Superior at RAM

Collection Focus: Mara Superior at RAM

Buy Here

Mara Superior: A Retrospective

Published in 2006 by New Britain Museum of American Art, New Britain, CT

Forward by Douglas Hyland, Director, New Britain Museum of American Art.

Essay by Bruce W. Pepich, Executive Director and Curator of Collection, Racine Art Museum, Racine, WI.

32-page, full-color exhibition catalog

Mara Superior: A Retrospective

Mara Superior: A Retrospective

Buy Here

413: Pioneering Western Massachusetts

This catalog accompanies the exhibition “413: Pioneering Western Massachusetts” on view at Fuller Craft Museum, Brockton, MA, August 20 – November 27, 2016. The exhibition and catalog explore the works and careers of five makers who have been responsible for the development of Western Massachusetts’s internationally renowned craft community: Josh Simpson (glass), Mark Shapiro (ceramics), Silas Kopf (woodworking), JoAnn Kelly Catsos (baskets), and Mara Superior (ceramics). The creative community and rural environment of Western Massachusetts offers opportunities for makers that are unlike those found anywhere else, and those featured in (413) have played a significant role in the region’s creative development. The bucolic setting and open creative community offer a distinct sense of place that is evident in their work.

VIDEOS FEATURING MARA SUPERIOR


Mara Superior, acclaimed ceramic artist known for blending delicate ceramic pieces with sharp social commentary, joins curator Kory Rogers for an engaging hour-long webinar discussion about her life, her art, and her creative inspirations. Discover how Mara’s passion for art history and world travel shapes her work, how historical subjects inspire contemporary conversations, and how she reimagines traditional forms like teapots into striking 3D sculptures. Don’t miss this exploration of creativity and innovation and learn more about Mara prior to the opening of her 2025 exhibition, Porcelain Love Letters: The Art of Mara Superior.

Uploaded on Apr 11, 2025 at 12:54 pm

Virtual exhibition tour with RAM Executive Director and Curator of Collections Bruce W. Pepich and RAM Curator of Exhibitions Lena Vigna
Video produced by Matt Binetti, Reservoir Video Co.

Join Racine Art Museum’s (RAM’s) Executive Director and Curator of Collections Bruce W. Pepich as well as Curator of Exhibitions Lena Vigna for a 14-minute virtual tour of the exhibition, Collection Focus: Mara Superior

For more about Superior and the exhibition at RAM, please visit: RAM Art: Mara Superior

Conversation with Jamie Franklin, curator at the Bennington Museum of Art continues his online series, “Chats with Jamie” with Ferrin Contemporary artist MARA SUPERIOR to discuss her dynamic practice and new works while in quarantine.

For more about Superior and the exhibition at Bennington Museum of Art, please visit: Bennington Museum 

AVAILABLE FROM COLLECTIONS


Works from Private Collections by Mara Superior are available for sale, gift, or acquisition. For pricing and availability, please use the inquire form.

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

Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

JASON WALKER

JASON WALKER

ARTWORKS & INSTALLATIONS

LIZARD DRAIN


Jason Walker
“Lizard Drain”
2024
porcelain, underglaze
11 x 11 x 1″

DOUBLE VISION


Jason Walker
Double Vision
2022

porcelain, underglaze
17 x 13 x 9″

FEEL LIKE I AM STANDING STILL


Jason Walker
Feel Like I am Standing Still
2022

porcelain, underglaze
16 x 22 x 13″

OSPREY


Jason Walker
Osprey
2018

porcelain, underglaze, luster, concrete
11 x 14 x 6″

TREE OF AVARICE


Jason Walker
Tree of Avarice
2022

wood panel, acrylic paint, porcelain, luster
71 x 48 x 5″ (6’ x 4 ‘ x 5”)

ADDITIONAL WORKS

BLOOM



LIVING IN BETWEEN



NESTING WITH THE SOCIALS


YOU MAY THINK YOU ARE ALONE…



WILDFLOWERS



JASON WALKER


Jason Walker Artist Portrait, 2019

ABOUT


American, b.1973, Pocatello, ID
lives and works in Cedar City, UT

Jason Walker’s ceramic sculpture question how we perceive and decipher technology and nature within our changing world. He has exhibited and taught widely including at the Renwick Gallery at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C., Haystack Mountain School for the Crafts, Penland School for the Crafts, Anderson Ranch Arts Center, The Pottery Workshop in Jingdezhen, China and the International Ceramics Workshop, Kecskemet, Hungary, South Korea, Ireland and France.

Walker has been awarded a 2009 NCECA International Residency Fellowship and a 2014 Artist Trust Fellowship from Washington State, as well as the Taunt Fellowship award at the Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts. His work is included in collections at the Fine Art Museum of San Francisco: De Young, the Carnegie Mellon Museum in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the Arizona State University Art Museum Ceramic Research Center, Tempe, Arizona and the Portland Art Museum in Portland, Oregon.

Walker received a BFA from Utah State University and a MFA from Penn State University and is represented by Ferrin Contemporary, and currently resides in Cedar City, Utah and is Lecturer of Ceramics at Southern Utah University.

Jason Walker, "Lizard Drain", 2024, porcelain and underglaze, 11 x 1", photo courtesy of the artist

Jason Walker, “Lizard Drain”, 2024, porcelain and underglaze, 11 x 1″, photo courtesy of the artist

ON LIZARD DRAIN

Lizard Drain is a play on how technologies are being developed and advancing quite rapidly, yet as a species our operating system is still the Lizard Brain. Things such as A.I., WiFi, and internet goggles are taking control of our bodies and mediating most of our lives. It has changed our perceptions of ourselves and ideas such as nature. Yet the genie is out of the bottle and these technologies will persist. We need to ask how we want to progress as a species – do we want to continue with our course of self-destruction, war and disembodied experiences? OR, can we somehow change course and become more compassionate and tolerant? It is salient because the way in which we see ourselves will determine the way in which we will model and develop new technologies and our perceptions of nature.

– Jason Walker, 2024

Jason Walker, “Bloom”, 2019, porcelain, underglaze, china paint, 26 x 26 x 9″. Installation view in “Personal Encounters”, solo exhibition at Ferrin Contemporary, 2019

ON HIS WORK

The culture I live in does not emphasize our physical connection and dependence on nature. The current ideology is reliant upon technology, and it promotes disembodied activity such as television [and] computers . . . The gap between man-made and natural is ever increasing.

Light bulbs, plugs, power-lines and pipes that grow from the earth are common images found in my work, juxtaposed with birds, insects, and organic matter such as leaves and trees. Similar to the thinking of the Hudson River School of painting, I attempt to portray nature’s vastness and human-kind as a small proponent of it. Yet I draw the small things of nature large and the huge creations of man small. I want to show how we influence the landscape, or nature. My ideas stem from my own experiences bicycle touring, backpacking and the daily hikes I take with my dog.

In an attempt to explore the methods of early American artists, such as Moran and Cole from the Hudson River School of Painting, I went to an American ‘wilderness’ and backpacked solo with my sketchbook for ten days. The landscape, plant and animal imagery are records from my experience in the Grand Staircase – Escalante National Monument in the desert of southern Utah. The technological imagery is a record of objects in my everyday experience and is used to express the way in which technology has influenced our perceptions of nature.  I developed a narrative based on the historical progression of our changing perceptions of ‘nature’ and ‘wilderness’ in America.  I titled the show ‘Nature Seeker’ because I think we use term nature very loosely in our language today, and as I hiked I felt as though I was seeking a place or an object that embodied the word nature. According to Webster’s dictionary, nature is something in its essential form untouched and untainted by human hand. So here lies the crux of my quest. At the very heart of our own description of nature we exclude ourselves from it. Does this mean I am not natural? Although this argument may seem purely semantic it is not. The way in which we perceive nature inadvertently describes the way in which we perceive ourselves. Ultimately, my quest is a journey to define for myself what it means to be human in the present time.

– Jason Walker

CURRENT + RECENT EXHIBITIONS

Are We There Yet? 2023, Chris Antemann, Sergei Isupov, Lauren Mabry

Are We There Yet? 2023, Chris Antemann, Sergei Isupov, Lauren Mabry


Ferrin Contemporary | July 15 – September 2, 2023

FEATURED EXHIBITIONS

OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

2022 | Group Exhibition at Ferrin Contemporary | North Adams, MA

Our America/Whose America? Is a “call and response” exhibition between contemporary artists and historic ceramic objects.

View the exhibition page HERE  & View the historic collection HERE

Featuring  Back Flow and Bristlecone:

HEY! LE DESSIN

2022 | Group Exhibition at Musée de la Halle Saint Pierre | Paris, France

113 artists, more than 500 artwork, and 20 countires

View the exhibition page HERE

Featuring Living in Between & Blooms:

JASON WALKER: Personal Encounters

2018 | Solo Exhibition at Ferrin Contemporary | North Adams, MA

Jason Walker’s solo exhibition, Personal Encounters, presents a new body of work that questions our inter-dependent relationship to nature and technology within the context of today’s world.

View the exhibition page HERE 

SELECT PAST EXHIBITIONS

NEWS & FEATURES

NCECA PITTSBURGH

REVIVE, REMIX, RESPOND The Frick Pittsburgh 7227 Reynolds Street, Pittsburgh Group show of contemporary artists who are breathing new life...

Jason Walker: Two Solo Shows

Jason Walker’s two solo exhibitions are on view in Bellingham, Wash., and Pittsburgh, featuring recent constructions and selected individual sculptures…

Published in 2014 by Bellevue Arts Museum, Bellevue, Washington

Forward by Stefano Catalani

Interview with Jason Walker and Stefano Catalani: A Conversation on Rivers, Roads, and the Split Down the Middle

Exploring the ecological and existential themes informing the site-specific installation

20-page, full-color exhibition catalog

This brochure, published by the Society of Contemporary Craft, includes biographical information on Walker as well as an essay by William L. Fox, Director of the Center for Art + Environment, Nevada Museum of Art, Reno, Nevada

Click here to view.

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

Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

KURT WEISER

KURT WEISER

AVAILABLE ARTWORK

Minor Key


Untitled Black and White Vase  #1 & 2


Black and White Vase  #1 & 2


KURT WEISER INSOMNIA PRINT SERIES

“These prints are the beginning of an exploration into 30 years of private sketchbooks. Some books are 30 years old and others just weeks. The past stimulates the future and the present is a matter of interpretation. It’s the exploration into the familiar that is always a surprise.”

— Kurt Weiser

About the Prints

Each print is in an edition of 10, 24 x 36 inches on a 30 x 44 inch Somerset 250 gsm paper, printed from linoleum cuts by Dan Mayer at Pyracantha Press. The Press is part of the Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts at Arizona State University in Tempe, AZ. Oleander and Flight Over Kansas are the first two of ten prints started in the summer of 2016.

Pyracantha Press is the independent publishing imprint in the Herberger Institute School of Art at Arizona State University. The Press is directed by Daniel Mayer who has produced inter-disciplinary collaborative works since 1986. Projects created under the Press are limited-edition books and prints that reflect our cultural landscape. Each project is unique and experimental in form and content. Press publications are in 105 national and international public collections such as Columbia University, Library of Congress, The Getty, Klingspor-Stadt Museum, Letterform Archive, Wellesley, Yale, and among others. Mayer’s private studio practices include award-winning large-scale public art projects, national and international exhibitions, collections, and artist’s residencies. Mayer was a nominee for the 2016 Arizona Governor’s Arts Awards, individual artist category.

CLICK ICONS BELOW TO VIEW

CIRCUMSTANCE

Kurt Weiser, "Circumstance" (Edition of 10), 2017, linocut print, ink on Somerset paper, print: 36 x 24"; paper: 44 x 30".

Kurt Weiser, “Circumstance” (Edition of 10), 2017, linocut print, ink on Somerset paper, print: 36 x 24″; paper: 44 x 30″.



FLIGHT OVER KANSAS

Kurt Weiser, “Flight Over Kansas” (Edition of 10), 2017, linocut print, ink on Somerset paper, print: 36 x 24″; paper: 44 x 30″.



NIGHTSHADE

Kurt Weiser, “Nightshade”(Edition of 10), 2017, linocut print, ink on Somerset paper, print: 36 x 24″; paper: 44 x 30”.



OLEANDER

Kurt Weiser, "Oleander" (Edition of 10), 2017, linocut print, ink on Somerset paper, print: 24 x 36"; paper: 30 x 44".

Kurt Weiser, “Oleander” (Edition of 10), 2017, linocut print, ink on Somerset paper, print: 24 x 36″; paper: 30 x 44″.



HOTHOUSE

Kurt Weiser, ‘Hothouse’ 2019, linocut print, ink on Somerset 250 gsm paper, 26 x 35.5″.



INSOMNIA

Kurt Weiser, “Insomnia” 2019, 2019, linocut print, ink on Somerset 250 gsm paper, 24 x 36″.



HIGHWAY 12

Kurt Weiser, “Highway 12″ 2019, 2019, linocut print, ink on Somerset 250 gsm paper, 36 x 28”.



MILKWEED

Kurt Weiser, “Milkweed” 2019, 2019, linocut print, ink on Somerset 250 gsm paper, 36 x 27″.



KURT WEISER


KURT WEISER

ABOUT


American, b. 1950
lives and works in Tempe, AZ

Kurt Weiser’s ceramic work draws inspiration from rich evocations of plant life to narratives derived from myth and history, placed into highly detailed tropical landscapes. These images are meticulously painted onto porcelain teapots, globes and other vessels. As Weiser notes “the painting is the three-dimensional reality”.

His most recent body of work includes linoleum-cut prints, inspired by decades of drawings from his sketchbooks. He has paired these prints with black and white vessels, relying on his graphic and fantastical style as the means for relating these rich narratives.

Weiser has shown internationally and throughout the United States, including solo exhibitions at the Montgomery Museum of Art (Montgomery, AL) the Museum of Contemporary Craft (Portland, OR) and the Holter Museum of Art (Helena, MT). His work can be found in numerous public collections, including Smithsonian Institution, Alfred University School of Ceramics, and the Los Angeles Museum of Art among many others. Weiser received his M.F.A. from the University of Michigan and recently retired from the position of Regents Professor of Art at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona.

Kurt Weiser, “Insomnia”, 2019, installation view, Ferrin Contemporary.

ON HIS WORK

“For years the work I did in ceramics was an effort to somehow express the beautiful nature of the material. Somewhere in the midst of this struggle I realized that the materials are there to allow you to say what you need to say, not to tell you what to say. So I gave up trying to control nature and decided to use what I had learned about the materials to express some ideas about nature itself and my place in it.” — Kurt Weiser

ON HIS PRINTS

“These prints are the beginning of an exploration into 30 years of private sketchbooks. Some books are 30 years old and others just weeks. The past stimulates the future and the present is a matter of interpretation. It’s the exploration into the familiar that is always a surprise.”

Prints are in editions of 10, 24 x 36 inches on a 30 x 44 inch paper, printed from Somerset 250 gsm linoleum cuts and printed at the Arizona State University Print Studio in Tempe, AZ, by Dan Mayer. Oleander and Flight Over Kansas are the first two of ten prints started in the summer of 2016. — Kurt Weiser

CURRENT + RECENT EXHIBITIONS

NEWS & FEATURES

Sorry, no posts were found.

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

Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

MARK SHAPIRO

MARK SHAPIRO

FEATURED


ARTWORKS & INSTALLATIONS

BARRELS

MARK SHAPIRO


ABOUT


In 1986, I moved from New York City to rural Western Massachusetts to make pots and build a wood kiln. I was able to buy a shipwreck of an old place that has an unusual feature from which I took the name for my pottery—a stone pool that Russell Conwell, turn-of-the-century preacher and educator and founder of Temple University in Philadelphia had built in 1893. The farmhouse, where Conwell was born, is rich in history—it had been a stop on the Underground Railroad during Conwell’s childhood, and he remembered John Brown and Frederick Douglass staying at the house.

While working on the place, I dug up a shard of a gray salt-glazed four-gallon crock that happened to have the makers’ stamp on it. “Hastings and Belding, Ashfield Mass.” It turned out to have been made only about 15 miles from my home and studio, at the middle of the last century. It got me thinking about pots that were made, bought, used, broken and disposed of within a specific region and the connection this implies between the community of users and makers. It led to my decision to move and restore the old shed (the one where fugitive slaves had slept) for use as a gallery to welcome local people at the pottery. It also prompted a deeper interest in early New England potters and their wares. In particular, the pots made from 1790–1830, wonderful swelling volumes of ovoid forms with their firing scars and flashing, spoke to me as powerful vernacular objects.

Before moving to Western Massachusetts, I had been living in New York and making sculpture while supporting myself as a carpenter. The turn to pottery answered the vexing problem that I had been unable to resolve with my sculpture: Where does the stuff go? On a pedestal in patron’s living room? In front of a building? In a museum storage vault? As a potter, on the other hand, my work would be held and used; it would stay in the main places of people’s lives. And, I could control most aspects of creative production—the concept, making, finishing, marketing and selling of the work, in a process and within a scale that preserves and enhances the humanity of the creative experience. As my work has evolved I continue to be compelled by the challenges of domestic pottery, but I have also recently become interested as in making larger scale work that is more appropriate to the scale and abstractness gallery space than the kitchen.

EXHIBITIONS


Are We There Yet? 2023, Chris Antemann, Sergei Isupov, Lauren Mabry

“ARE WE THERE YET?”

July 15th – September 2nd, 2023 | Ferrin Contemporary

ARE WE THERE YET? is a celebration of Ferrin Contemporary’s 40+ years as leaders in the field of modern and contemporary ceramics. What began in 1979 as a woman-owned cooperative studio and gallery in Northampton, MA has flourished across the years and the locations to become the international ceramic experts and material champions known as Ferrin Contemporary.

View the exhibition page here

NEWS


INQUIRE


Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

BEATRICE WOOD

BEATRICE WOOD

AVAILABLE FROM COLLECTIONS

Works by Beatrice Wood are available for sale, gift, or acquisition from Private Collections and Estates. For pricing and availability, please inquire HERE.

FROM THE ARCHIVE (NFS)

LUSTER VESSELS, SCULPTURES & DRAWINGS

Beatrice Wood’s use of lustre glazes as a primary surface decoration enhanced her myriad of forms with an amazing iridescence, particularly notable on Chalice and Plate forms (like the pieces featured below) which are a signature of and now symbol for the artist herself.

DRAWINGS & PAINTINGS

ABOUT BEATRICE WOOD


Spanning the time period from the late 1950s to mid 1990s, this preliminary selection includes works by acclaimed artist Beatrice Wood.  It provides collectors and institutions the opportunity to add works with detailed provenance to their collections by the recognized masters of their mediums.

For more information and pricing on available artwork,
please contact Ferrin Contemporary

BIOGRAPHY

Beatrice Wood (1893–1998) lived a long artistic life and is associated with the Avant Garde Dada movement. She began working in ceramics in the 1930s mastering and producing lusterware as well as narrative figures and wall tiles, loosely formed and humorous in subject matter.

CV

EDUCATION
Ceramics with Gertrud and Otto Natzler, Los Angeles, 1940
University of Southern California (with Glen Lukens), 1938
Hollywood High School, Adult Education Department, CA
Ceramics Class, 1933
Finch School, New York, 1911
Academie Julien, Paris, 1910

SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS
2016 EXPOSED: Heads, Busts, and Nudes, Ferrin Contemporary, North Adams, MA
1999 Beatrice Wood, Frank Lloyd Gallery, Santa Monica, CA
Drawing for Life, Achim Moeller Fine Art Gallery, New York, NY
1997 Beatrice Wood: A Centennial Tribute, (traveling) American Craft Museum, New York, NY, Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA; Museum of Contemporary Art, Lake Worth, FL; The Butler Museum, Youngstown, OH
Frank Lloyd Gallery, Santa Monica, CA
Garth Clark Gallery, New York, NY
Rena Bransten Gallery, San Francisco, CA
1995 Beatrice Wood: Aphrodisia, CSUN Art Galleries, Northridge, CA
Garth Clark Gallery, New York, NY, Los Angeles, CA
1994 Garth Clark Gallery, New York, NY, Los Angeles, CA
1993 Garth Clark Gallery, New York, NY; Los Angeles, CA; Kansas City, MO
1992 Garth Clark Gallery, New York, NY; Los Angeles, CA; Kansas City, MO
1991 Garth Clark Gallery, New York, NY
1990 Intimate Appeal, The Figurative Art of Beatrice Wood, Garth Clark Gallery, New York, NY; Los Angeles, CA; The Oakland Museum, Oakland, CA (traveling)
1989 Suzanne Hilberry Gallery, Birmingham, MI
1988 Garth Clark Gallery, New York, NY; Los Angeles, CA
1987 SPARC (Social and Public Arts Resource Center), Los Angeles, CA
1986 Garth Clark Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Hilberry Gallery, Ann Arbor, MI
Beatrice Wood: A Legend, Fresno Art Center and Museum, Fresno, CA
1985 Garth Clark Gallery, New York, NY, and Los Angeles, CA
1984 Beatrice Wood: Retrospective, Garth Clark Gallery, New York, NY; Los Angeles, CA
1983 Beatrice Wood Retrospective, (traveling), Art Gallery, California State University, Fullerton and Everson Museum, Syracuse, NY
Morgan Gallery, Kansas City, MO
Garth Clark Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
1982 Garth Clark Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
1981 Beatrice Wood: A Very Private View, Garth Clark Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
1978 Beatrice Wood: Ceramics and Drawings, Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY
1973 Beatrice Wood: A Retrospective, Phoenix Art Museum, AZ (traveling)
1964 California Palace of the Legion of Honor, San Francisco, CA
1962 Takashimaya Department Store, Tokyo
1959 Ceramics: Beatrice Wood, Pasadena Art Museum, Pasadena, CA
1955 Ceramics by Beatrice Wood, American Gallery, Statler Center, Los Angeles, CA (traveling)
1951 B. Wood – Ceramics, Honolulu Academy of Art, Honolulu, HI
1949 Ceramics of Beatrice Wood, American House, New York, NY

MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
Arizona State University Art Museum, Tempe, AZ
Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, NY
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, PA
Charles A. Wustum Museum of Fine Arts, Racine, WI
Cooper Hewitt Museum, NY
Detroit Institute for the Arts, Detroit, MI
Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY
Museum of Arts and Design, NY
Museum of Fine Art, Boston, MA
Museum of Modern Art, NY
Newark Museum of Art, Newark, NJ
Oakland Museum, Oakland, CA
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA
Staatliche Museen Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin, Germany
Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England

AWARDS
1994 Governor’s Awards for the Arts (California)
1993 Recognition as A Role Model by Women in Film
1992 Gold Medal for Highest Achievement in Craftsmanship, American Craft Council
1988 Distinguished Service Award, Arizona State University
1987 Fellow of American Craft Council Women’s Art Caucus, National Award NCECA Award
1986 Women’s Building Award
1984 Living Treasure of California
1983 Symposium Award of the Institute for Ceramic History
1961 Goodwill Ambassador from USA to India – exhibition and lecture tour

Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

BETH CAVENER

BETH CAVENER

Warning
Warning
Warning

Warning.

POISE: Peter Christian Johnson

POISE: Peter Christian Johnson

POISE: Peter Christian Johnson

November 18–December 31, 2016
Ferrin Contemporary
1315 MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, MA

EVENTS
Opening Reception: Saturday, November 19, 4–6pm

“POISE explores the tension between acts of labor and collapse, between precision and failure.  It is a meditation on entropy that uses Gothic cathedrals as a foil to examine the dichotomy of beauty and loss. For this exhibition Johnson has created a series of highly organized architectural forms based on the floor plans of historic cathedrals. These forms are distorted and deconstructed under the weight of the glaze in an attempt to find virtue in brokenness.” — Peter Christian Johnson

Click here to view more work by Peter Christian Johnson.
Click here to view or download press release.

EXHIBITION CATALOG

Glenn Adamson has written an insightful essay on Johnson and his work in POISE.

“In the kiln, the works melt, crumpling into themselves. The ceramic grid is unable to support its own weight, and that of the heavy, glassy, colored material on top. By the time the piece is fully fired, it seems on the verge of total collapse, a few degrees of heat away from becoming a heap of slag. And that, of course, is just how Johnson wants it.”

Click here to view catalog online.