Project Tag: Leslie Ferrin

STEPHEN BOWERS

STEPHEN BOWERS

Stephen Bowers: A Conference of Birds


Lauraine Diggins Fine Art

Boonwurrung Country
5 Malakoff Street
North Caulfield VIC Australia 3161

October 26 – December 7, 2024

STEPHEN BOWERS


Stephen Bowers Artist Portrait

ABOUT


b.1952,  Katoomba, New South Wales, Australia
lives and works in in Norwood, South Australia

Stephen Bowers  is a self-taught artist working in ceramics- often focusing on strikingly decorative textiles, wallpapers, comic strips, natural history illustration found within the imagery of his childhood in the mid-1970’s. Close observation of his often seemingly innocent decorations of cockatoos, kangaroos, and willow patterns, reveals subtexts of irony, commentary, and social observation, inviting viewers to look beyond the bravura of the surface to discover a complex and layered world.

Bowers has participated in numerous international exhibitions within Australia and overseas, including the UK, Norway, Italy, Denmark and China and here in the states. His work is included in numerous permanent collections, including the Art Gallery of Western Australia, Peabody Essex Museum (Salem, MA), Brooklyn Museum of Art, (NY, NY), National Museum of Art Architecture and Design, (Oslo, Norway), Los Angeles County Museum of Modern Art, (LA, CA), Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, (Launceston, Tasmania)  Museum of International Ceramic Art, (Denmark), Australian National Gallery, (Canberra, Australia), Powerhouse Museum, (Sydney, Australia) National Museum of History, (Taipei Taiwan), Parliament House, (Canberra Australia), among many others.

STATEMENT


Stephen Bowers, “‘Dresser’ Crane Fragment” 2018, white earthenware, underglaze colors, glaze, 7.5 x 7.5 x 1.75″.

Stephen Bowers brings together in his painted ceramic vessels many of the traditions from the history of ceramics. In any one piece, one might find traces of many familiar styles and decorations.

Initially from Sydney, Stephen Bowers became involved in ceramics in the late 1970s when looking for a challenge while teaching in a country town in South Australia. He did a traineeship in the Jam Factory’s ceramic workshop in Adelaide in 1982, and spent the next five years as an art teacher during the day and a potter at night. There was a strong influence in the early years from the Adelaide version of ‘Funk’ ceramics. In 1990, Bowers himself became head of the ceramics workshop at the Jam Factory, responsible for both training of staff and the workshop’s production output. At the same time he maintained his own practice of painting on vessels and also contributed to some large public art projects including a commemorative birdbath in a park and fittings for the ceiling in an inner city arcade.

His work is almost always functional in its form, and ranges from mugs, jugs, teapots, plates and platters that are mainly domestic in their purpose, to monumental urns and jardinieres intended for large public places. For the large items he usually collaborates with colleague Mark Heidenreich who is an expert thrower of large pots. The forms themselves, large or small, are crucial in the meaning of each work, but at the same time they are the basis for ordering his interest in the decoration of their surfaces. His drawing skills, and the way these are carried out through ceramic materials, are considerable, but the drawings are more than decoration and illustration. They are witty collages that betray thoughtful research and intelligent observation.

Born in Katoomba, NSW, Australia in 1952, Stephen Bowers grew up in Sydney and now lives and works in Norwood, South Australia. A self-taught artist, he became involved in ceramics in the mid 1970s when he began producing strikingly decorated work.

Reflecting the influence of textiles, wallpapers, comic strips, natural history illustration and childhood memories his work brims with ideas and imagery that trace their origin to both historical and contemporary sources. Knowledge of ceramic decorative technique allows him to use these sources in his on-going interpretations of motifs such as cockatoos, kangaroos and willow patterns. His work is a sustained investigation into hand painted imagery and how it might be applied to the ceramic surface. Appreciation of this approach is a key to understanding how he develops and composes his imagery and achieves the complexity of resolution in his work.

It is not only skill at illustration that Bowers acquired over time; close observation of his often seemingly innocent decorations reveals subtexts of irony, commentary and social observation, inviting viewers to look beyond the bravura of the surface to discover a complex and layered world.
In addition to his work as an artist, Bowers has also contributed considerably to the careers of many within the visual arts, craft and design sector in Australia; from 1990 – 1999 he was Creative Director of JamFactory’s ceramics studio; from 2004 – 2010, he was Managing Director of the organisation. He has presented numerous exhibitions and lectures both in Australia and overseas.

TECHNIQUES


Stephen Bowers, “Five William Morris Camouflage Plates” underglaze, glaze, earthenware, gold lustre, 12–14″.

Inspired by the vivid colour, imagery and detail found within the traditions of ceramics (particularly Staffordshire wares) Bowers prefers under-glaze decoration and on-glaze lustre and enamel in a type of pottery known as ‘earthenware’.

Layers of decoration are built up in stages, across many firings (some pieces being fired six times). Backgrounds and detailed brush work decoration are applied first, with treatments of gold or enamel applied last.
Works are covered with a gloss coat of clear earthenware glaze. This, like the glaze often found on Staffordshire pieces and other earthenware, can be expected, across time, to develop a ‘crazed’ appearance, where the surface layer of glaze exhibits a series of fine cracks. Continuously developing across the years, this is a natural characteristic of earthenware and is often looked for in antique pieces as indicators of their age.

SUBJECT MATTER


Stephen Bowers, “Blue Kangaroo Plate” (from the Blu Roo series), 2013, underglaze, glaze, earthenware, 25.5″.

BOTANICAL & ZOOLOGICAL ILLUSTRATION

Bowers is interested in records and imagery of Australian flora and fauna especially from the time of first contact and colonial periods. He often uses these images to explore the idea of Australia as ‘The Antipodes’, a kind of conjectural land, both ancient and new, strange and different, an upside-down, topsy-turvy southern counterweight to the mass of UK/Europe and the north. His interest in the birds and animals of bushland Australia means that many of his works also reflect on the on-going effect settlement has on the environment.

KANGAROOS

The kangaroo that frequently appears in his work is a reference to the copper plate engraving published in Hawkesworth’s edition of Cook’s Voyages, An account of the voyages undertaken by the order of His Present Majesty for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere, 1773. The first definite printed illustration of a kangaroo, it was engraved after a painting by pre eminent animal painter George Stubbs (1724 -1806) and is often referred to as Stubbs’s Kangaroo. Joseph Banks (1743- 1820), the naturalist on Captain Cook’s vessel the Endeavour, commissioned Stubbs to paint a portrait of the animal from a skin brought back to England. The finished work was exhibited with the title ‘The Kongouro [sic] from New Holland, 1770’ at the Society of Artists in London in 1773.

Stubbs meets Spode 2011, underglaze, clear glaze, 6 x 63 cm. Boldly crosshatched, the image of the copperplate kangaroo engraved from Stubb’s painting which appeared in Hawkesworth’s edition of Cook’s Voyages, An account of the voyages undertaken by the order of His Present Majesty for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere, 1773, asserts itself over a wash background depicting details of a numbered analytical chart of the engraved copper plate for Spode’s blue willow ‘Temple’ pattern.

PARROTS

Bowers’ parrots have various sources, including the Zoology of New Holland , 1794 by George Shaw (1751- 1815) with figures by James Sowerby (1757 -1822), the first book dedicated to Australian fauna (and the first to use the term ‘Australia’ to refer to this country), as well as more contemporary illustrators including Neville William Cayley (1886- 1952) author and illustrator of What bird is that ? 1950, and William T Cooper (1934- ) illustrator of many books including Australian Parrots, 3rd edition published in 2002 and Cockatoos: A Portfolio of All Species, 2001.

MOTIFS & PATTERNS


Stephen Bowers The Complete Angler plate

William Morris (1834 – 1896) one of Britain’s most influential designers, he is best known for his superb flat repeat patterns for fabrics, wallpaper and furnishings. Designing over 50 wallpapers for his company Morris & Co, he used plant forms in every one of his designs, finding inspiration from his gardens, country walks, and woodcuts prints from the 1500s. Bowers frequently employs patterns such as Compton (1896), Brer Rabbit (1882), Honey Suckle (1883) and Pink and Rose (1890) in his works.
Willow Pattern appearing in about 1780, attributed to Thomas Turner of Caughley, and engraved by Thomas Minton (1765- 1836), the standard Willow Pattern draws on imagery found on hand painted Chinese blue and white export ware which made their way to Britain and Europe during the 1500’s through to the 1700’s.

Early designs for the pattern show pagodas and gardens, often with pines and orange and willow trees, a bridge (frequently with figures crossing the bridge), a bay (or harbour) with a boat and remote temples and pagodas on distant islands and archipelagos.

From the 1780’s on, these ‘poetic’ elements were mixed and altered by the many potteries producing versions of the design, with later versions incorporating a pair of birds and becoming increasingly standardised. Suitably enough, the ‘willow legend’ of two star-crossed lovers is a further fictive evolution, retro-fitted to the design in the 1840s to broaden its appeal and boost sales.

At the height of Staffordshire wares in the 1830s, over 200 potteries produced Willow patterns. However with the introduction of the British Copyright Act in 1842, potters were discouraged from simply taking designs from each other. This led to the development of new designs ranging from lyrical floral patterns, to idyllic landscapes to sporting and industrial views.

ABOUT THE WORK: WALK THE PLANK


Stephen Bowers, “Walk the Plank” 2013, handmade surfboard (shaped by Peter Walker from paulownia timber), painted decoration, fiber-glass, resin, 7’7” x 22″

Walk The Plank 2013. Handmade wooden surfboard (paulownia timber), painted decoration, fiber-glass and resin. Board shaped by Peter Walker, painted by Stephen Bowers, Adelaide, South Australia. 7’7” high x 22″wide.

Inspired by classic blue willow pattern, Bowers creates a ‘dub’ (or pirate version) to decorate this handmade wooden surfboard created by master Australian wooden surfboard maker Peter Walker. In this work is the world of willow harbor, coastline, and floating islands re-imagined in another form to illustrate an unwritten folk-tale about pirates off the coast of Maine.

Looking within this (at first appearance) subtly changed landscape, layers strange alternative narrative unfold, reworking the cliché of willow pattern into a diverting and whimsical take, where the old blue willow morality tale is hijacked as a tableau theatre, a location for buccaneer daydreaming and imponderable fictions.

In this silhouetted and floating world, successive layers of images appear. Images from pirate lore and local North East USA vernacular culture replace the pagodas and temples of the oriental inspired classic. Storm tossed and beset by sea monsters, ghost images of strange treasure galleons and pirate ships drift in the shadow-filled background. Whether dancing a bizarre jig a-top a cannon or sporting a greasy pig-tail queue gazing out to sea, pirates abound.

Willow Pattern pagodas are replaced by Cape Cod real estate. Edward Hopper’s 1927 Lighthouse and buildings on Portland Head, Cape Elizabeth appear in the middle ground, while the Chinese bridge becomes the suspension bridge to Deer Island. Of the two iconic lovebirds, one mutates into a pirate’s mascot in the form of a bat. As well, a diminutive Statue of Liberty lighthouse beacon and classical facade (looking a bit like the MFA Boston) become a Museum of piratical Arrrt (admired by comic strip characters Krazy Kat and Ignatz).

In this surreal surf culture piece (even the title – Walk the Plank – plays at once on buccaneer executions and surfboard lore) the complex world of willow harbour is awash with new images and strange undercurrents. The classic cobalt dreamscape of archipelagos, islands and mainland become a map of poetic pirate fantasy. This work reconfigures blue willow pattern; allowing it to become something of a new folk tale, set within its borders, an illustration that draws audiences into the zone of action, into the world of pirate willow, inviting us to walk the plank, cross the bridge go out to the island and behind the scenes.

EXHIBITIONS


CURRENT + RECENT EXHIBITIONS

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NEWS


Potters on Pots: Stephen Bowers

The Ceramic Review | June 18th, 2019

Finding shards of blue and white china as a child led Australian ceramic artist Stephen Bowers on a technical and symbolic journey of discovery. Here he discusses how the fragmented images have influenced his own richly decorated ceramics.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE

MEDIA & VIDEO


STEPHEN BOWERS: A Conference of Birds

Exhibition catalog | Published October 2024

The illustrated catalogue for Stephen Bowers: A Conference of Birds, includes an essay by Gallerist Leslie Ferrin.

VIEW THE CATALOG HERE

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CLAIRE CURNEEN

CLAIRE CURNEEN

CLAIRE CURNEEN

CURRENT + RECENT EXHIBITIONS

EXPOSED: Heads, Busts & Nudes

EXPOSED: Heads, Busts & Nudes group show of ceramic figural sculpture by masters 1965–present originally presented at 1315 MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, MA, from June 18 to September 5, 2016...

As one of the UK’s foremost ceramicists Claire Curneen’s work is distinct for its figuration. She is also a Senior Lecturer at the Centre for Ceramic Studies, Cardiff Metropolitan University.

Spanning nearly 20 years as a practicing artist, Curneen’s works, ranging from small scale porcelain pieces to a large terracotta figure installed on the exterior of a Guildhall, explore grand themes about the body and the human condition.

Notable for her application of hand-building, pinching and applying clay in patches that registers the artist’s hand and flesh in the surface of the clay, Curneen produces highly visceral works, which tap into of our deepest desires, fears and mysteries. Referencing Roman Catholic imagery and ideology and early Italian Renaissance paintings such as Piero Della Francesca’s ‘Baptism of Christ’, these figures bear bold narratives of saints, martyrs and rites of passage punctuated by often delicate yet dramatic totems to death, re-birth and the sublime.

In 2011 Curneen received one of the Arts Council of Wales’s most prestigious accolades, a Creative Wales Ambassador Award, and has embarked upon a new body of work inspired by research she will be conducting into the National Museum of Ireland’s collections. Her award also includes use of a drawing studio at The Mission Gallery, Swansea.

Curneen’s work can be seen in over 20 public collections, including the Victoria & Albert Museum, London; National Museums and Galleries of Wales, Cardiff; Taipei Ceramics Museum, Taiwan and the Crafts Council, London.

Videos about the artist talking about her work can be seen on her website here.

www.clairecurneen.com

CURRENT PROJECT

‘Guardian’ 2012, Porcelain, cobalt, glaze, gold lustre

The title for this piece extends my ongoing interest into religious iconography of Italian Renaissance Painting, in particular ‘Tobias and the Angel’ 1470-1475 by Verrocchio. The story explains how the young Tobias, sets out on a long journey to recover a debt for his blind father,  he meets another traveller, the Archangel Rapheal, who guides him and protects him. Guardian explores some of these themes focusing on the intimacy of the relationship.  The figure is printed with rich cobalt blue, like chinese blue and white porcelain, which communicates the historical imprint in which a ceramic object can hold,  charged with a sense of its own history.  Like ‘Tobias and the Angel’ it is witness to the changing world. This figure stands looking forward, it holds back a part of itself in order to act as a guardian, a protector, potent and rich in meaning.

Bio
Born: 1968, Ireland

 

Education

1999-92
University of Wales Institute Cardiff, Master’s Degree in Ceramics

1986-90
Crawford College of Art & Design, Cork, Ireland, Diploma in Art and Design

1990-91
University of Ulster, Belfast, Postgraduate Diploma in Applied Arts

 

Upcoming, Current & Recent Exhibitions

2016
EXPOSED: Heads, Busts, Nudes, Ferrin Contemporary, North Adams, MA
Bernadaud: My Blue China, Ariana Museum, Geneva, Switzerland
2015
To This I Put My Name, Hans Peter Dähler, Solothurn, Switzerland
2014
To This I Put My Name, Ruthin Craft Center, Ruthin, Denbighshire, Wales and Harley Gallery, Notinghamshire, England
2013
New Blue and White, Museum of Fine Art, Boston, USA

Public Collections

Ulster Museum, Belfast

Crawford Municipal Art Gallery, Cork, Ireland

Crafts Council, London

Limerick City Art Gallery, Limerick, Ireland

National Museums and Galleries of Wales, Cardiff, UK

Sara and David Lieberman Collection, Arizona State University, USA.

Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Shipely Art Gallery, Tyne & Wear Museums, Gateshead, UK

Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, UK

Benaki Museum, Athens, Greece

Aberystwyth Arts Centre. Wales, UK

Cleveland Crafts Centre, Middlesbrough, UK

Icheon World Ceramic Centre, Korea

National Museum of Scotland

Oldham Museum, Manchester, UK

York Museum, England, UK

Taipei Ceramics Museum, Taiwan

Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, UK

Mint Museum, Charlotte, Carolina, USA

Kennedy Museum of Art, USA

 

Past Exhibitions

2012

Never Never, Aberystwyth Arts Centre

Reflection, Galerie Kunstforum Solothurn, Switzerland

New World: Timeless Vision,  IAC exhibition, New Mexico Museum of Art, USA

2011

Beaux Arts, Bath (solo)

Placement, Ceramic Connections Wales/Scotland, Oriel Davies, Mid Wales

Lost Certainty, Claire Curneen and Alice Kettle, CAA, London

3×2: The Shed, Galway, Ireland

2010

Pretty young Things, Lacoste Gallery, Boston, USA

Claire Curneen and Olivia Chargue, Le Don du Fel, France

Passage, Craft in the Bay, Cardiff, Wales

Parings, a collaboration with textile designer Alison Welsh, MMU Manchester

Contemporary British Studio Ceramics, The Grainer Collection, Mint Museum, Charlotte, USA

2009

British Ceramics,  Bavarian Crafts Council, Germany

Otherworldly Messages, Galerie Marianne Heller, Germany

Collect, Saatchi Galleries, CAA London

2008

Myths and Legends, Contemporary Applied Arts, London

Claire Curneen, Ruthin Craft Centre, Wales (solo, catalogue)

2007

Secondary Relics, Blackswan Gallery, Frome, England

Menschenbild, Galerie Kunstforum, Solothurn, Switzerland

2006

Collect at the V&A, Ruthin Craft Centre.

One Piece one Artist, Galerie Marianne Heller, Germany

Narratives Glynn Vivian Gallery, Swansea.

Collecting Contemporary Ceramics, Ruthin Craft Centre, Wales

The Human Condition, the Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh

Figurative Ceramics, Cervini Haas Gallery, Scottsdale, USA

2005

Showcase at Manchester Art Gallery (DVD,catalogue and slide set)

The  International Art & Design Fair, New York, represented by Adrian Sassoon

2004

Succour- Claire Curneen, The Gallery, Ruthin Craft Centre (solo, catalogue)

Faith, Nottingham Castle Museum (catalogue)

Collect at the V&A, represented by CAA London

SOFA Chicago, represented by CLAY, LA

2003

Flower Power, Norfolk Museum and Archaeology Service and Sheffield     Galleries and Museum Trust (catalogue)

Telltale, Narratives in Contemporary Craft, Shipley Art Gallery, Gateshead (catalogue)

Augenblicken, Kunstforum Kirchberg, Switzerland

2002

Claire Curneen and Heather Belcher, Contemporary Applied Arts, London

SOFA Chicago, USA

2001

Figurative Ceramics, Crafts Council shop at The V&A, London

2000

Made at the Clay Studio, The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, PA

Figurative Ceramics, Nancy Margolis Gallery, NewYork.

1999

New Masters Old Masters, Oxford Gallery, Oxford.

Firing Imagination, British Council Exhibition, Sao Paulo (catalogue)

1998

Ceramic Series/Claire Curneen, Aberystwyth Arts Centre, (catalogue)

1997

New Work, Claire Curneen, Ruthin Craft Centre, Wales (solo, catalogue)

1996

Philip Eglin and Claire Curneen, Contemporary Applied Arts, London

 

Awards and Competitions

2012

Creative Wales Ambassador Award.  ‘The Museum Object as a point of Reference’.

2008

Taiwan International Ceramics Biennale Competition, Taipei Ceramic Museum.

2005

Creative Wales Award, Arts Council of Wales

Selected for 3rd World Ceramic Biennale, Korea International Competition

2004

Selected for 1st European Ceramics Competition, Greece.

2003

Shortlist for the Arts Foundation Award for Ceramics, U.K.

2001

National Eisteddfod of Wales, Gold Medal in Craft & Design

2001

Le Prix de I’AMN, Porcelain Triennale, Nyon

Selected for the 52nd International Competition for Contemporary Ceramic Art,  Faenza, Italy

1999

Ceramics Monthly Magazine, Winner of the Sculpture category

1995

Crafts Council Setting up grant

 

Professional Memberships

Selected Makers slide index, Crafts Council, London

Contemporary Applied Arts

International Academy of Ceramics, Geneva

 

Periodicals

Ceramics Arts and Perception, review of “Pretty Young Things”, Lacoste Gallery, Massachusetts by Christine Temin, 2011

Ceramics Arts and Perception, article by Alex McErlain, Issue 62, 2005/2006

New Ceramics, Issue 5, 2005, profile on Claire Curneen by Amanda Fielding (German & English)

Keramik Magazin, Issue 4, 2003, “Contemplation”, by Ian Wilson

Kerameiki Techni, Issue 42, 2002, “The Role of Narrative in Claire Curneen’s Ceramics” by Natasha Mayo.

Ceramic Review, Issue 195, 2002, “A Melancholy Beauty”, by Nicolas Lees

Ceramics Art and Perception, Issue 38 1999, “Searching for Answers”, by Sarah James

Ceramic Monthly, International Competition, 1999

 

Books

2010

Contemporary British Studio Ceramics, Yale Unversity Press, New Haven and London with the Mint Museum of Craft + Design, North Carolina

‘Pairings’, Monologues & Dialogues, MMU.

Fanning, Micheal. Ghost Trawler, a poetry book.  The publication is a collaboration between artists and the poet.  Published by Sommerville Press, Ireland.

2009

Whiting, David. Modern British Studio Ceramics and their Studios, photography Jay Goldmark.

Cooper, Emmanuel. ‘Contemporary Ceramics’ A Global Survey of Trends and Traditions, Thames and Hudson,

Breaking the Mould, Black Dog Publishing, UK

Masters in Porcelain, Lark Books, USA

Schwartz, Judith. Confrontational Ceramics, USA

Ming, Bai. World Famous Ceramic Artist Studios, (Volume 1, Europe)

2004

500 Figures in Clay, Lark Books, USA

2002

Flynn, Michael. Ceramic Figures. A&C Black Ltd.

Waller, Jane. The Human Form in Clay, Crowood Press Ltd.

2001

Blandino, Betty. The Figure in Fired Clay, A&C Black Ltd.

 

Residencies

2000

The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, USA

Crawford Arts Centre, St.Andrews, Scotland, funded by Artworks Wales.

 

Television and Radio

‘Kaleidoscope’  BBC Radio 4, 1997, review of Ruthin exhibition by Emanuel Cooper

‘The Art’.   BBC 2, short film of artist at work.

 

Lecturing

Senior Lecturer, Centre for Ceramic Studies, Cardiff Metropolitian University

SIN-YING HO

SIN-YING HO

RECENTLY ON VIEW


Are We There Yet?

at Ferrin Contemporary

ARTWORK

SIN-YING HO


ABOUT


Sin-Ying Ho Lives and works in New York and Jingdezhen, China.

Ceramic artist Sin-Ying Ho was born in Hong Kong, immigrated to Canada, and currently resides in New York City. She holds an honor diploma from Sheridan College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning in 1995, a BFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in 1997 and an MFA from Louisiana State University in 2001.

Ho has taught and run workshops, lectures and exhibitions all across Canada, as well as from Metropolitan Museum of Art and Harvard University to Hong Kong and Jingdezhen – over 1000 years old city of porcelain in China. She has taught at Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond; Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design in Vancouver, Alberta College of Art and Design in Calgary; and Concordia University in Montreal.

Among her honors, she has received the San Angelo National Ceramic Competition Merit Award, Canada Council Grant for the Canada Year of Asian Pacific, Canada Council of the Art Research and Development Grant, and a PSC-CUNY Grant. She was nominated for a 2011 Louis Comfort Tiffany Biennial Award. She was one of the feature artist on a documentary TV series, Routes: The Spiritual Odyssey of Chinese American Artists. Recently, the series of “Eden” was exhibited at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

Her pieces are in the permanent collections of the Icheon World Ceramic Centre in Korea, Glenbow Museum in Canada, Yingge Ceramics Museum in Taiwan, and Consulate General of Canada in Hong Kong. Her work Music serves as the cover image of Utopic Impulses: Contemporary Ceramics Practice, edited by Ruth Chambers, Amy Gogarty & Mireille Perron (Ronsdale Press 2007).

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ON HER WORK

Eden is a mythical garden, a place of pristine and natural beauty. Eden is the search for paradise, a mythical place of bliss, delight and contentment. It is a place for reflection, meditation, and a haven from earthly delights. The “Eden” series was inspired during the onset of the economic crisis in 2008, as it was a time when we were all searching for answers why the economic collapse happened.

The size of the vessel produces a visual appearance and is a reference to the human form. I began treating the surfaces with hand painted cobalt pigment traditional Chinese Flowers painting integrated with a silhouette of ‘Adam and Eve’ as referenced from Renaissance paintings. Inside the silhouette of ‘Adam and Eve’, these printed symbols, signs, charts and language of free market, trace the complex universal human nature and human traits; greed, materialistic desires, hopes and technological transformations. This universal human nature and human traits are intrinsic to the concept of the series.

As the world moves into new age of globalization, people are now brought together more than ever, and our global culture is constantly evolving towards the next unknown. Referencing my own history being a Hong Kong-­‐Chinese in New York, Eden speaks to the potent nature of these cross cultural intersections and hopes that these collisions bear meaningful fruit. – Sin-ying Ho

CURRENT + RECENT EXHIBITIONS



SIN-YING HO: PAST FORWARD March 30–May 27, 2018 Hood Downtown, 53 Main Street, Hanover, NH Opening with the artist Friday, April 6, 5–7pm “Conversations and Connections” discussion between Hood Director John...

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

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

CAROLINE SLOTTE

CAROLINE SLOTTE

CAROLINE SLOTTE

CURRENT + RECENT EXHIBITIONS

The reworking of second hand objects play a pivotal role in my practice. I manipulate found materials, primarily ceramic everyday items, so that they take on new meanings. The tensions between the recognizable and the enigmatic, the ordinary and the unexpected are recurring thematic concerns.

Material has a key role in what I define as my point of departure in contemporary art. It is not, however, merely the physical and aesthetic qualities that interest me, but also the associations and references inherent in the material.

Many of the objects that I choose to rework carry within them a rich history, a cultural background that I can pull from. In that way, I can count on the objects triggering associations and my role in the process becomes one of pointing to the material and the stories inherent in it.

To me choosing a material-based starting point means allowing the work process to take the form of a discussion. It means accepting a certain number of limitations. My main reason for doing so is that I find it intellectually challenging. I set myself a task, and the task is to follow the direction that the material indicates, to allow myself to be led. – Caroline Slotte, 2014

CAROLINE SLOTTE

Caroline Slotte (b. 1975 Helsinki, Finland) holds an MA in Ceramics from Bergen Academy of Art and Design, Norway, in addition to education from Denmark and Finland. From 2007 to 2011 Slotte was a research fellow in the Norwegian Artistic Research Fellowship Programme. Affiliated with Bergen Academy of Art and Design, Dept of Specialised Art, she was also a member of the interdisciplinary research project Creating Art Value, funded by the Research Council of Norway.

The reworking of second hand objects play a pivotal role in Caroline Slotte´s practice. She manipulates found materials, primarily ceramic everyday items, so that they take on new meanings. The tensions between the recognizable and the enigmatic, the ordinary and the unexpected are recurring thematic concerns. More recent explorations reveal an expanded interest in material perception and material recognition, teasing out situations where the initial visual identification fails resulting in an unsettling state of material confusion. Demonstrating an engaged sensitivity towards the associations, memories and narratives inherent in the objects, Slotte´s intricate physical interventions allows us to see things we would otherwise not have seen.

Slotte´s works have been exhibited internationally and acquired by, among others, the Museum of Arts and Design in New York, the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, Röhsska Museum in Gothenburg, the Design Museum in Helsinki and the Museum of Decorative Arts in Oslo.

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VIPOO SRIVILASA

VIPOO SRIVILASA

VIPOO SRIVILASA

As a Thai-born Australian artist, I am interested in culture shift and migration experience– how a change of culture and place affects people. My work explores contemporary social, political, and ethical issues that come from my experience of living in both Australia and Thailand.

I work predominantly in ceramics but also produce animation, works on paper, and mixed media sculptures. I am interested in expanding my art practice into a community-based art form involving and connecting with other members of the international art community.

My current interest is in blue-and-white ceramics. I use the blue and white color combination as a reference to the Chinese porcelain exported to Europe hundreds of years ago, but also to my own migration from Thailand to Australia, from east to west. — Vipoo Srivilasa

The Patience Flowers Series

An eighteenth-century Meissen Snowball Blossoms Teapot was the inspiration for Vipoo Srivilasa’s “Patience Flowers” series. The Meissen piece, decorated with hundreds of hand-painted, three-dimensional blossoms, impressed Srivilasa with the amount of patience, concentration, and skill that was required to create it and inspired him to produce his own work with a similar resonance. The “Patience Flowers” series was first begun during his residency in Jingdezhen, China, in late 2010.

Profile

Vipoo’s development as a professional artist began when he moved from Thailand to Australia in 1997 to undertake a Master of Fine Art and Design (Ceramics) at the University of Tasmania, where he later accepted a six-month Honorary Research Associate position. Now working and living in Melbourne, Srivilasa works predominantly in ceramics but also produces animation, works on paper, and mixed media sculptures.

In 2002, he was selected by Craft Australia to represent the country at SOFA CHICAGO (Sculpture, Objects, & Functional Art), in the exhibition ATTITUDE: New Australian Ceramics. Since then he has achieved widespread recognition in the ceramics field, particularly in the Asia-Pacific region and more recently in Europe, the United States, and Canada.

In addition to exhibiting his work, Srivilasa is actively involved in directing and participating in international cultural exchange projects aimed at creating opportunities for contact between artists working in clay. In 2012, as a result of his success with these community-building programs, he was elected as a member of the International Academy of Ceramics, the foremost organization representing the interests of ceramicists worldwide.

Vipoo Srivilasa

Born in Bangkok, Thailand

Lives and Works in Melbourne, Australia

Education

1998 Master of Fine Art and Design (ceramic), University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania

1997 Graduate Diploma of Arts (ceramic), Monash University, Melbourne, Australia

1994 Bachelor of Art (ceramic), Rangsit University, Bangkok, Thailand

Scholarship and Awards

2014 Gold Coast International Ceramic Art Award

Lighton International Artists Exchange Program

Australia–Korea Foundation

2013 Cool Japan Fund, Japanese government

Arts Victoria, International Program Grant

Australian Council for the Arts, Skill and Arts Development General

2012 Creative Industries Fund, Copyright Agency Limited

Australia–Thailand Institute Project Grant

Australia International Cultural Council Grants

2011 Arts Victoria, International Program Grant

Australian Council for the Arts, New Work Development Grant

2009 Australian Council for the Arts, Skill and Arts Development General

2008 Arts Victoria, International Program Grant

Sculpture Award, Suncoast Clayworkers Awards, Queensland

Finalist, Toyota Travel Award

2007 Australian Council for the Arts, New Work Development Grant

Honorable Mention World Ceramic Biennale, Icheon, Korea

2005 Australia–Thailand Institute Project Grant

Arts Victoria, International Program Grant

2004 First (Acquisitive) and Third Prize, Artful Teapot Award, Paynter Gallery, Bendigo, Victoria

Second Prize, Golden Teapot Award

2004, Morpeth Gallery, Morpeth, New South Wales

2003 First Prize, Golden Teapot Award, Morpeth Gallery, Morpeth, New South Wales

2001 First Prize (ceramic hand-building), City of Redcliffe Excellence in Craft Award, Queensland

Merit Prize (paperclay), Port Hacking Potters Group Awards, New South Wales

1999 Highly Commended, Tasmania Potters Society Annual Exhibition, Tasmania

1998 Honorary Research Associate, School of Art University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania

Northcote Decoration Award, Tasmania Potters’ Society Annual Exhibition, Tasmania

Solo Exhibitions

2014 Happy Land, Edwina Corlette Gallery, Brisbane, Australia

2013 How to Make a Million Before Dinner, Edwina Corlette Gallery, Brisbane, Australia

Red Room, Maunsell Wickes Gallery, Sydney, Australia

2012 Indigo Tomb, Nellie Caston Gallery, Melbourne, Australia

Thai Na Town – Little Oz, 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art, Sydney and Chulalongkorn

University’s Art Center, Bangkok, Thailand

Indigo Monster, La Lanta Fine Art, Bangkok, Thailand

Ready to Play, Maunsell Wickes Galleries, Sydney, Australia

2011 Symbols, Edwina Corlette Gallery, Brisbane, Australia

2010 Aftermath, collaboration project with the Pottery Workshop, PWS Gallery, Jingdezhen, China

2009 Indigo Kingdom, Anna Pappas Gallery, Melbourne, Australia

Colonies, Surapon Gallery, Bangkok, Thailand

2008 For The Future, Über Gallery, Melbourne, Australia

Roop, Root, Ruang, (Taste-touch-tell) 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art, Sydney, Australia

2006 My Self : My Other, Über Gallery, Melbourne, Australia

2005 Lai Krarm, Surapon Gallery, Bangkok, Thailand

2004 People I Have Met, Skepsi on Swanston, Melbourne, Australia

2003 Mythical Monster, Freeman 3 Gallery, Hobart, Australia

2002 Action Man, Haecceity Arts Gallery, Melbourne, Australia

2001 The Coral Show, Haecceity Art Gallery, Melbourne, Australia

2000 Ocean Fantasies, Jam Factory Contemporary Craft and Design Gallery, Adelaide, Australia

1998 Ocean Fantasies, Side Space Gallery, Hobart, Australia

1997 Mermaids, State Craft Gallery, Melbourne, Australia

Group Exhibitions

2015 GrowlerFest, Lawrence, KS

GrowlerFest, Cummington, MA

Selected Works from Current Projects, Ferrin Contemporary, New York Ceramics & Glass Fair, NY

Made in China: The New Export Ware, Ferrin Contemporary, New York Ceramics & Glass Fair, NY

Everything is All White, Kasher|Potamkin, New York, NY

2014 Made in China: The New Export Ware, Ferrin Contemporary at Independent Art Projects, North Adams, MA

Made in China: The New Export Ware, Ferrin Contemporary, Miami Project, Miami, FL

artKamp: indigo mass, Independent Art Project, North Adams, MA

Earth and Fire: South East Asian Ceramic, Workhouse Art Centre, Lorton, VA

BIG Ceramic, Yarra Gallery, Melbourne, Australia 23rd Biennale Internationale de Céramique deVallauris, Vallauris, France

COLLECT, Saatchi Gallery, London, Great Britain Melbourne Art Fair, Melbourne, Australia

Inquiring Finds, Honolulu Museum of Art Spalding House, Honolulu, HI

Mythology Meets Archetype, Northern Clay Centre, Minneapolis, MN

50 Shades of Brown, Gallerysmith, Melbourne, Australia

Adrian Sassoon, The European Fine Art Fair, Maastricht Exhibition Centre, Netherlands

Edwina Corlette Gallery, Melbourne Art Fair, Melbourne, Australia

2013 The Gyeonggi International Ceramic Biennale, Icheon, Korea

SEXSE@Medalta, Medalta Gallery, AB, Canada

Ceramic Top 40, Ferrin Contemporary and Red Star Studios, Kansas City, KA

Sydney Contemporary Art Fair, Sydney, Australia

3×3 Project, The National Art Gallery, Bangkok, Thailand

Hobart Art Prize, Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, Hobart, Australia

New Blue and White, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA

Represented by Ferrin Gallery, New York Ceramic Fair, New York, NY

The Hua Krathi Project, RMIT University School of Art Gallery, Melbourne, Australia

Modern Masters, International Trade Fair, Munich, Germany

Crafting Design/Designing Craft: 40 Years of JamFactory, JamFactory Gallery, Adelaide, Australia

2012 Ferrin Gallery at Art Miami, Midtown, Miami, FL New World: Timeless Visions, NM

Museum of Art Santa Fe, NM

Jakarta Contemporary Ceramic Biennale 2012, Nort Art Space, Jakarta, Indonesia

Adrian Sassoon, Pavilion of Art & Design, London, England, UK

Masterpiece London, Adrian Sassoon, The Royal Hospital Chelsea, London, England, UK

COLLECT, Clare Beck at Adrian Sassoon, Saatchi Gallery, London, England, UK

Pacific Rim Connection, Azuma Gallery, Seattle, WA

The Pottery Workshop 25th Anniversary, Seattle Design Center, Seattle, WA

On Kindness: an Australia India Culture Exchange, Habitat Centre, New Delhi, India

Man and Beast, Rex Irwin Art Dealer, Sydney, Australia

Cross Path, Beaver Galleries, Canberra, Australia

Thai Trends from Localism to Internationalism, Bangkok Art and Culture Centre, Bangkok, Thailand

2011 Presented by John Natsoulas Gallery, SOFA Chicago, Chicago, IL Ceramic Annual of America, San Francisco, CA

The Pursuit of Porcelain, Ferrin Gallery, SOFA New York, NY

In Family Unity – Unity of the World, Moscow State Institute of International Relations, Moscow, Russia

East-West Ceramic Collaboration, University of Hawaii Art Gallery, Monoa, HI

2010 International Ceramics Competition of L’ALcora, L’Alcora Ceramics Museum, Castellon, Spain

A New Insight of International Contemporary Ceramics, Degas Arts Space, Shanghai, China

Elegant Monsters, Gallerie Philosophie, Taipei, Taiwan

Gold Coast International Ceramic Art Award, The Art Centre, Queensland, Australia

Ceramic Now?, Whitehorse Art Space, Melbourne, Australia

Hobart Art Prize, Tasmania Museum and Art Gallery, Hobart, Australia

Anna Pappas Gallery, Depot Gallery, Sydney, Australia

In the Family Unity – Unity of the World, Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia

2009 Blue-White, White-Blue, Galerie Handwerk, München, Germany

The Ring of Fire, Ayala Museum, Makati, Philippines

At the Crossroad of Civilization, Yingge Ceramic Museum, New Taipei City, Taiwan

Pressing Matter, Cheongju Biennale, Cheongju, South Korea

Super Normality, J Gallery, Bangkok, Thailand

Zibo international Ceramic Art Expo, Zibo, China

Trans-Pot, Nanjing Arts Institute, Nanjing, China Bravura: 21st Century Australian Craft, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia

Recent Acquisitions: City of Port Phillip, The Gallery, St. Kilda Town Hall, Melbourne, Australia

Professional Experience

2014 Project Leader, artKamp, international artist residency, Project Art, Cummington, Massachusetts, USA

Invited Artist, South East Asian Ceramic Symposium, Workhouse Art Centre, Lorton, VA

Ferment, Long Beach Museum, Los Angeles, CA

Invited Artist, Bleach Masterclass, Melbouren Now, National Gallery of Victoria, Canada

Invited Artist in Residence, Northern Clay Centre, Minneapolis, OH

2013 Invited Artist in Residence, Medalta International Artists in Residence, Medicine Hat, AB, Canada

Invited Artist in Residence, Happy Lucky Site, porcelain factory, Arita, Japan

Invited Artist in Residence, Cicada Press, College of Fine Art, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

Invited artist, Mentoring Camp, The 7th Gyeonggi International Ceramic Biennale 2013, South Korea

Visiting Artist, Scotch College, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

2012 Invited Artist in Residence, Pottery Workshop, Jingdezhen, China Panel Artist, Australian Ceramic Triennials, Adelaide, Australia

Visiting Artist, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand

Visiting Artist, Rachasuda College (hearing disability college), Bangkok, Thailand

Artist in Residence, Sacred Heart Primary School, Melbourne, Australia

Artist in Residence, St Margaret’s Junior School, Melbourne, Australia

Invited Artist, Little Treasure, Shapperton Art Museum, Shapperton, Victoria, Australia

2011 Invited Artist in resident, University of Hawaii, HI

Invited Artist in Residence, Medalta International Artists in Residence, Medicine Hat, AB, Canada

Visiting Artist, Emily Carr University, Vancouver, BC, Canada

Visiting Artist, Wesley College, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Artist in Residence, Doncaster Gardens PS, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Artist in Residence, Numurkah Primary School, Numurkah, Victoria, Australia

2010 Artist in Residence, Pottery Workshop, Jingdezhen, China

Participating Artist, Sanbao International Art Festival, Sanbao Ceramic Art Institute, Jingdezhen, China Visiting artist, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand

Artist in Residence, Scotch College, Beaconhills College, Victoria, Australia

Artist in Residence, Moree Christian School, Moree, New South Wales, Australia

2009 Artist in Residence, Thai Celadon factory, Chiang Mai, Thailand

Artist in Residence, Huaguang Ceramic, Zibo, China

Visiting Artist, Nanjing Arts Institute, Nanking, China

Guest Demonstrator, The Ring of Fire, Ayala Museum, Makati, Philippines

Guest Demonstrator, The Crossroad of Civilization, Yingge Ceramic Museum, New Taipei City, Taiwan

Guest Demonstrator, Pressing Matter, Cheongju Biennale, South Korea

Guest Demonstrator, Spring Fever Clay Festival, Queensland, Australia

Guest Demonstrator, Australian Ceramics Triennial, Sydney, Australia

Exhibition Co-ordinator, At the Crossroad of Civilization, Yingge Ceramic Museum, New Taipei City, Taiwan

Keynote Speaker, Art Education Victoria Annual Conference, Melbourne, Australia

2007 Master Artist, Clay Edge: 7th Gulgong Ceramic Festival, Gulgong, New South Wales

Visiting Artist at Beijing University of Technology, Beijing, China

2006 Guest Demonstrator at VERGE, 11th National Ceramics Conference, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Organizer and manager, Clay Alchemy, cultural exchange project between Thailand and Australia Exhibition Panelist, Craft Victoria, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

2005 Conference Presenter, Art Education Victoria Annual Conference, Victoria, Australia

Exhibition Panelist, Craft Victoria, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Guest Lecturer, Rachasuda College (hearing disability college), Bangkok, Thailand

2004 Selection Panelist, FRESH

2004 Student Award, Craft Victoria, Victoria, Australia

Conference Presenter, Art Education Victoria Annual Conference, Victoria, Australia

Teacher, Holmglen TAFE, Victoria, Australia

Project Leader, Clay Alchemy, a cultural exchange between Thai and Australian artists

2003 Tour Leader, Thailand Pottery, Craft and Cuisine Tour, Where? Conference Presenter, Art Education Victoria Annual Conference, Victoria, Australia

Visiting Artist, Mentone Girls’ Secondary College, Mentone, Victoria, Australia

Guest Lecturer, Silapakorn University, Prasanmit University, Bangkok

2002 Visiting Artist, Washington University in Saint Louis, St. Louis, MO

Guest Lecturer, SOFA Chicago, “ATTITUDE: New Australian Ceramics,” Chicago, IL

Guest Lecturer, “Craft as a Career” for Craft Victoria, Australia

1999 Access Tenant, Ceramic studio, Jam Factory, South Australia

1998 Artist in Residence, College of Fine Art, University of New South Wales, New South Wales, Australia

1995 Product Development Manager, Nattawit Co., LTD (ceramic export company), Bangkok, Thailand

1993 Freelance Fashion Accessories Designer, Bangkok, Thailand

SERGEI ISUPOV: Hidden Messages

SERGEI ISUPOV: Hidden Messages

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION

December 2, 2016–April 2, 2017
Erie Art Museum, Erie, PA

“Sergei Isupov: Hidden Messages” introduces larger-than-life figural sculptures shown in the context of a career survey presented as a multi-room installation. The exhibition, featuring 40 selected works, was designed and built by the artist and co-curated by Erie Art Museum director John Vanco. Spanning the 20 years Isupov has lived and worked in America, the show forms a semi-autobiographical wunderkammer — a collection of curiosities.

“By morphing together humans and animals, creating dimensionally illusionistic works, and embedding secret scenes within them, Isupov creates multi-layered artworks that challenge viewers’ perception of reality. An erotic surrealist and protective family man, Isupov blends images drawn from experience and imagination that invite viewers to complete the work through their personal interpretations.” — John Vanco
The exhibition features three large standing figures at its entrance, a 25-foot plinth of marching figures, a room of intimate romance and family, and an expanse dominated by 10 by 14 foot painted female head blowing a gust of smaller works across a 40-foot wall.

ABOUT SERGEI ISUPOV

Sergei Isupov is an Estonian-American sculptor internationally known for his highly detailed, narrative works. Isupov explores painterly figure-ground relationships, creating surreal sculptures with a complex artistic vocabulary that combines two- and three-dimensional narratives and animal/human hybrids. He works in ceramic using traditional hand building and sculpting techniques to combine surface and form with narrative painting using stains and clear glaze.

“Everything that surrounds and excites me is automatically processed and transformed into an artwork. The essence of my work is not in the medium or the creative process, but in the human beings and their incredible diversity. When I think of myself and my works, I’m not sure I create them, perhaps they create me.”

Isupov has a long international resume with work included in numerous collections and exhibitions, including the National Gallery of Australia, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (TX), Museum of Arts and Design (NY), Racine Art Museum (WI), Museum of Fine Arts Boston (MA), and the Erie Art Museum (PA), at which he presented selected works in a 20-year career survey Hidden Messages in 2017 and Surreal Promenade in 2019 at the Russian Museum of Art (MN).

Sergei Isupov: Hidden Messages

Sergei Isupov: Hidden Messages is available for exhibition at other museums and galleries.

Contact us for more information •

20th SAN ANGELO NATIONAL CERAMIC COMPETITION

20th SAN ANGELO NATIONAL CERAMIC COMPETITION

20th San Angelo National Ceramic Competition

April 11–September 29, 2014
San Angelo Museum of Fine Art

Jason Walker of Bellingham, Washington, will be the featured Invited Artist. Walker will also participate in a panel discussion and present a workshop at the symposium.

EVENTS

Friday, April 11, 6–9pm
Opening Reception

Thursday, April 10–Monday, April 14
San Angelo’s Ceramics Weekend

Gallery exhibits, workshop presentations, tours, Texas barbecue dinner, and other events will be held throughout San Angelo over the long weekend.

Friday, April 11, 1:30–4:30
Twenty-Eighth Annual Ceramic Symposium
Carr Education-Fine Arts building, Angelo State University

Panelists for the Symposium will be Competition Juror Léopold Foulem and Invited Artist Jason Walker. The Ceramic Symposium is co-sponsored by Angelo State University, the San Angelo Museum of Fine Arts, and The Old Chicken Farm Art Center.

Saturday, April 12, 9–4
Demonstration Workshop with Jason Walker
Old Chicken Farm Art Center, 2505 Martin Luther King Boulevard

This all-day workshop will be presented by Invited Artist Jason Walker. Click here to download registration.

This juried exhibition features work from leading ceramic artists as well as new talent from across the nation, Canada and Mexico. Léopold Foulem of Montréal, Canada, an internationally-recognized ceramic artist, instructor, and scholar will jury the competition.

Jason Walker is represented by Ferrin Contemporary.
Read more, see more… 

THE NEW YORK CERAMICS AND GLASS FAIR 2014

THE NEW YORK CERAMICS AND GLASS FAIR 2014

January 22–26, 2014
Bohemian National Hall, NYC, NY
321 East 73rd Street (Between 1st & 2nd Avenues)

The Bacchanalistas:  Passions + Pleasure

This entertaining on site exhibition curated by Leslie Ferrin spotlights the seductive side of historic and modern ceramics and glass objects curated from selected objects from contemporary and antique dealers participating at the fair.

On Saturday, January 25 at 4pm, Leslie Ferrin will present an overview of The Bacchanalistas: Passions + Pleasure. Her lecture will explore contemporary ceramics by living artists whose art practice draws inspiration from ceramic history.  Themes of passion, eroticism, sexuality, abundance and excess of food and wine will be shown through figural sculpture, animated painted vessels and still life. Earlier, at 2pm, Robert Hunter, editor or Ceramics in America, will present Angels and Demons: The Pleasures of Pottery and Porcelain. Click here for full lecture schedule.

Paul Scott: New American Scenery
During his recent residencies, lecture tour, and travels in the US, Scott gathered and created a new series, American Scenery, inspired by his travels, observation, and research into American landscape painting, prints, and the subsequent use of those images on ceramic transfer ware. Knowledge drawn from behind-the-scenes tours at museums and collections throughout the North East influences this new work where Scott has applied prints he produced in the USA onto rescued, cast off ceramic plates from the 19th and early 20th centuries. His work tells stories that explore the unexpected movement of images through materials, media, cultures, politics, histories, and geographies,  inviting us to see a whole group of objects in a new way.

Contemporary Ceramics
On exhibit will be new work by contemporary ceramic artists Robin Best, Guy Michael Davis, Leopold Foulem, Giselle Hicks, Sergei Isupov, Katie Parker, Mara Superior, and Kurt Weiser.

Teapots
From utilitarian to conceptual, selected teapots by contemporary artists from studios and private collections, circa 1900 to the present.

EVENTS
New York Ceramics Fair | 2014 LECTURE SERIES
The lecture program, free with show admission, is sponsored by the Chipstone FoundationClick here for full lecture schedule.

Click here to download and print your free admission ticket to New York Ceramics Fair | 2014.

MORE …

Teapots Transformed: Exploration of an Object

Teapots Transformed: Exploration of an Object

This book tells the tale of an art form — from traditional, functional teapots to an eclectic mix of contemporary designs. A delight for tea drinkers around the world, an inspiration for artists, and a visual feast for the growing number of teapot collectors.

  • $30
  • 128-page, full-color, hardbound book
  • Published January 1, 2000 by GUILD Publishing
  • Print length: 128 pages
  • Language: English
  • Publication date
  • Dimensions: 9.5 x 0.75 x 9.5 inches