Project Type: ALSO SHOWING

ADAM CHAU

ADAM CHAU

FEATURED ARTWORK

GENERATED LOVE, 2024


set of 7

SECRET MESSAGE, 2022


TXT, 2018


SWIPE, 2019


POINT, 2022


ADAM CHAU


Adam Chau Headshot, Amanda Kibbel Photography

ABOUT


An expert in the field of ceramics, Adam Chau (he/him) blends traditional craftsmanship with cutting-edge technology. With a BFA from Maine College of Art and a Masters in Design from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Adam makes contemporary art in his studio in Connecticut and frequently travels for residencies. His work has exhibited globally, earning international acclaim and a robust publication record. Adam received the NCECA Emerging Artist Fellowship in 2018 and has been a member of the International Academy of Ceramics, a UNESCO partner, since 2019.

As a curator, Adam has served as the Exhibitions Director at ArtsWestchester (2021-2025), New York State’s largest independent arts council; Director of Exhibitions for NCECA (2022-2026+); and has an independent practice for traveling exhibitions of contemporary art around the United States.

Adam Chau Headshot, Allen West Photography

ON HIS WORK


“I produce blue-and-white porcelain objects using cobalt as a pigment, drawing parallels with both historic craft as well as a material used in the tech industry. As an Asian American, I hope to continue the lineage of blue-and-white by infusing a digital perspective on such a respected medium.”

JUSTIN ROTHSHANK

JUSTIN ROTHSHANK

FEATURED ARTWORK

A People’s Dinnerware


Justin Rothshank
“A People’s Dinnerware”
2020
earthenware, glaze, ceramic decals
various dimensions

This is an exhibition of dinnerware featuring portraits of 90 Americans. The evolution of this dinnerware set began in 2006 when I began reading Robert Caro’s monumental 4 volume book series on the life of Lyndon B. Johnson, the 36th president. In the years since then I’ve read innumerable books about presidential history, biographies about unelected leaders, and children’s books highlighting accomplishments of US leaders from the past 250 years. Most recently, the book Schomburg by Carole Boston Weatherford has been incredibly inspiring in continuing the research for this project.

A People’s Dinnerware | Select Works on View | The Dining Room of the Wickham House at the Valentine Museum | Richmond, VA

Of the 90 American figures featured in the dinnerware set, 16 are currently displayed in Richmond, Virginia as part of Ferrin Contemporary’s exhibition, Our America/Whose America? (on view February 20, 2024 through April 21, 2024). This group includes:

Installation of The People’s Dinnerware in the Dining Room of The Wickham House


JUSTIN ROTHSHANK


ABOUT


b. 1978 in Washington D.C.
lives and works in Goshen, IN

Justin Rothshank has been working as a studio ceramic artist in Goshen, Indiana since 2009. In 2001 he co-founded the Union Project, a nonprofit organization located in Pittsburgh, PA.

Justin’s ceramic work has been exhibited and published nationally and internationally, including articles in Ceramics Monthly, American Craft, Studio Potter, The Log Book, and Neue Keramik. He has been a presenter, panelist, visiting artist, and artist-in-residence at numerous universities, schools, conferences, and art centers throughout the United States and abroad. His functional and decorative ceramic ware is available for purchase in more than two dozen galleries and gift shops around the country.

Justin was presented with a 2017 Individual Advancement Grant from the Indiana State Arts Council, and Award of Excellence by the American Craft Council in February 2009. In 2007 he was recognized by Ceramics Monthly Magazine as an Emerging Artist. He has also been awarded an Alcoa Foundation Leadership Grant for Arts Managers, a 2007 Work of Art Award from Greater Pittsburgh Arts Council, the 2005 Decade of Servant Leadership Award from Goshen College, and was named to Pittsburgh Magazine’s 40 under 40 in 2005.

STATEMENT FROM BROOKE & JUSTIN ROTHSHANK


We recognize that the land we have been living on for the past 10 years is the ancestral home of the Potawatomi Nation. The Potawatomi people were stewards of this land for many generations leading up to an unjust treaty in 1828 when the land was taken by the United States Government and the Potawatomi were forcefully removed and relocated.

We recognize that we have grown up with privileges that many members of our local and global community do not enjoy. We’re working to change systems, both macro and micro, to make life more equitable for all. Being an ally is a lifelong pursuit for us. We’ve failed often, and likely will again. We’re open to criticism. We feel strongly that being artists, culture makers, and people of faith means risk taking and failure.

We are donating what we can and making sure our voices are heard through our votes and through the businesses we support. We are trying to learn more, reading books together as a family by Black Authors about Black history and experiences. We’re creating artworks to honor a more complete history of our country in an effort to educate ourselves and the communities that engage with our work.

We are working to build collaborative networks of artists from different backgrounds. We believe that collaboration is a vulnerable experience. There is of course the possibility of rejection or disappointment. Despite this risk, there has never been a more relevant time to reach out to the stranger in our lives and seek collaboration among ourselves. Vulnerability in this way opens us up to learning and building new relationships.

As part of our commitment to the Mennonite faith we tithe 10% of all our income, which we earn by selling our artwork. We are conscientious objectors to war and work actively to promote nonviolent means of reconciliation. In tithing our money we support racial justice, craft based education, Immigrant Justice, environmental preservation, fair housing standards and other means of creating a more equitable and peaceful society. We are committed to lead through example and action.

ON VIEW & UPCOMING

Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in "Our America/Whose America?". Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in “Our America/Whose America?”. Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

2024 | Group Exhibition in the Wickham House at the Valentine Museum | Richmond, VA

February 20, 2024 – April 21, 2024

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

View the exhibition page HERE

Justin Rothshank, “Presidential Table” detail 2016.

KNOW JUSTICE | Justin and Brooke Rothshank

2016 | Exhibition at Ferrin Contemporary | North Adams, MA

September 10-November 12, 2016

KNOW JUSTICE presents a two-person show by Justin and Brooke Rothshank focusing on American politics, the Supreme Court, and presidential history. Brooke’s miniature watercolor portraits are complemented by Justin’s decal-printed tableware.

View the exhibition page HERE

INQUIRE


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

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

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KEVIN SNIPES

KEVIN SNIPES

FEATURED ARTWORK


Kevin Snipes
“Minding The Gap”
2024
porcelain, glaze, underglaze
9 x 4.5 x 3″

Kevin Snipes
“Of Course Things Were Still Complicated”
2024
porcelain, glaze, underglaze,
11 x 5 x 4″

KEVIN SNIPES


Kevin Snipes Artist Portrait

Kevin Snipes Artist Portrait

ABOUT


b. Philadelphia, PA
lives and works in Philadelphia, PA

Kevin Snipes is an American visual artist whose works primarily consists of an interplay of narrative drawings and hand-built porcelain constructions. Along with his studio practice, Kevin has taught numerous workshops and has given lectures on topics such as creativity, art, and the construct of otherness. He was born in Philadelphia, but grew up in Cleveland, Ohio. He holds a BFA (1994) from the Cleveland Institute of Art and did graduate studies at the University of Florida (2003), in Gainesville, Florida. Kevin’s work reflects his interest in understanding human behavior through psychological attributes such as attraction and repulsion, inner versus external identity and the relationship of the self and the other.  Kevin’s art embodies his role as a storyteller. He seeks to draw people into conversation through his art.

Kevin Snipes, “Of Course Things Were Still Complicated”, 2024, porcelain, glaze, underglaze, 11 x 5 x 4″

ON HIS WORK IN OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

On the other side of the wall, things are not as different as they may seem…

-Kevin Snipes

RECENT EXHIBITION

Kevin Snipes, Our America/Whose America? Installation in the Parlor Room at the Wickham House at the Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA

INQUIRE


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

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

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JUDY CHARTRAND

JUDY CHARTRAND

FEATURED ARTWORK


…IS A ZERO


OF THE DIVELL


THE GREAT SPIRIT SMILES!!


THE TOURIST TOSS


JUDY CHARTRAND


ABOUT


b. 1959, Kamloops, BC, CAN
lives and works in Vancouver, CAN

Judy Chartrand is a Manitoba Cree artist, born in Kamloops, BC and was raised in a marginalized neighborhood located in Vancouver’s skid row area back in the early 1960s. She is an artist whose work frequently confronts issues of postcolonialism, socio-economic inequity and Indigenous knowledge expressed through the mediums of ceramics, found objects, archival photos and traditional techniques that include beading, tufting and porcupine quilling on hide.

ON HER WORK IN OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

Much of my work confronts issues of colonization, assimilation and identity politics.

I began my journey looking directly at my family’s history beginning with my Mom sharing her Residential School experiences at the Pine Creek Indian Residential school from 1926 to 1938 as well as her life after her release and her marriage to a batterer and subsequent common-law relationships that all culminated in her having to make moves so that she could survive in an atmosphere that was racially geared against her.

I wondered why her/my story was the same as so many other First Nations families so I began to look outward. This led me to look at racism via the KKK, Neo-nazi, Skin-head, White Nationalists groups.  I still wasn’t finding answers because our experiences have not been with these groups, but with your every-day white folk. This led me to looking at the concept of whiteness, white racism, white privilege and white power. I learned that our poverty, disfunction and displacement had nothing to do with us being less than, but more about us being bamboozled and criminalized so that it was a substantial guarantee that we suffered greatly in all ways imaginable. 

I was drawn to Coming of the White Man plate where the center bears an image of two native American figures as statues surrounded by images of City Hall, Post office, Mt. Hood and the Portland Hotel. It reminded me of images I’ve seen where the three Spanish ships: the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria are off in the distance and on the shore are indigenous males pointing in the direction of the ships. The story that unfolds differs greatly depending on whose version you side with as in the colonizer or the colonized. 

I have chosen to respond with using another image where after peace talks with a coalition of Delaware, Seneca-Cayuga and Shawnee tribes, Colonel Bouquet authorized the spread of smallpox. Each one of them were aware of the plan to break this agreement and use two infected blankets and a hanky to deal with the tribes in a more permanent way.

My response piece has in turn, infected their image with today’s definition of an obnoxious, angry, entitled and often racist white person who uses their privilege to get their way or police other people’s behaviors…henceforth, smallpox Karens.

JUDY CHARTRAND STUDIO CERAMICS CANADA FEATURE

Becoming interested in advertising on nineteenth- and twentieth-century product tins, Judy began to pay close attention to stereotypical depictions of Native people often used as logos to promote the brand. The images either romanticized the “noble savage,” or they were overtly racist and demeaning. As Judy has written:

“These images were widely accepted because they appeared harmless, and they soothed white consciences. They reference a nostalgic past while promoting white supremacy through their depiction of First Nations peoples.”

In 2020, Chartrand responded to the murder of George Floyd, calls for racial and economic justice, and the growing awareness of racial inequality with a series of hand-painted plates skewering racism in all its forms. She targets white supremacy and the absence of diverse representation in comic books, placing these images on tableware to locate the issues squarely in the domestic sphere. Home is where children first learn to hate, where racist attitudes thrive, and where inequalities in law and culture dictate inequalities of income, access to resources, and justice.

Works painted on vintage china recall settler culture. Images of white people phoning 911 to report completely legal activities conducted by people of colour, and white fragility exemplified by endless, meaningless, apologies, target the dominant culture’s ignorance and aggression. The bone china recalls the decimation of the buffalo that resulted from government plans to force Aboriginal peoples away from traditional lifestyles, to “Kill the Indian and save the Man.” The extermination left enormous piles of buffalo bones to rot on the prairies. These bones were shipped in large quantities to Britain, where they supplied some of the “bone” in bone china. 22

READ MORE BY AMY GOGARTY HERE

RECENT EXHIBITIONS

Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in "Our America/Whose America?". Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in “Our America/Whose America?”. Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

2024 | Group Exhibition in the Wickham House at the Valentine Museum | Richmond, VA

February 20, 2024 – April 21, 2024

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

View the exhibition page HERE

Ferrin Contemporary “Our America/Whose America?” Drawing Room Installation at the Wickham House, Richmond, VA, 2024

RECENT 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

On the Featured Works in the Exhibition:

Much of my work confronts issues of colonization, assimilation and identity politics.

I began my journey looking directly at my family’s history beginning with my Mom sharing her Residential School experiences at the Pine Creek Indian Residential school from 1926 to 1938 as well as her life after her release and her marriage to a batterer and subsequent common-law relationships that all culminated in her having to make moves so that she could survive in an atmosphere that was racially geared against her.

I wondered why her/my story was the same as so many other First Nations families so I began to look outward. This led me to look at racism via the KKK, Neo-nazi, Skin-head, White Nationalists groups.  I still wasn’t finding answers because our experiences have not been with these groups, but with your every-day white folk. This led me to looking at the concept of whiteness, white racism, white privilege and white power. I learned that our poverty, disfunction and displacement had nothing to do with us being less than, but more about us being bamboozled and criminalized so that it was a substantial guarantee that we suffered greatly in all ways imaginable. 

I was drawn to Coming of the White Man plate where the center bears an image of two native American figures as statues surrounded by images of City Hall, Post office, Mt. Hood and the Portland Hotel. It reminded me of images I’ve seen where the three Spanish ships: the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria are off in the distance and on the shore are indigenous males pointing in the direction of the ships. The story that unfolds differs greatly depending on whose version you side with as in the colonizer or the colonized. 

I have chosen to respond with using another image where after peace talks with a coalition of Delaware, Seneca-Cayuga and Shawnee tribes, Colonel Bouquet authorized the spread of smallpox. Each one of them were aware of the plan to break this agreement and use two infected blankets and a hanky to deal with the tribes in a more permanent way.

My response piece has in turn, infected their image with today’s definition of an obnoxious, angry, entitled and often racist white person who uses their privilege to get their way or police other people’s behaviors…henceforth, smallpox Karens.

VIDEOS & MEDIA

RECORDING | Online Artist Talk: Courtney M. Leonard & Judy Chartrand

Watch an online artist talk with Courtney M. Leonard and Judy Chartrand from the 2023 International Ceramic Art Fair, hosted by the Gardiner Museum in Toronto, Ontario.

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
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LEONARDO QUILES

LEONARDO QUILES

Vejigante Mask

2022
hand built porcelain
underglaze, glaze, 6 x 8 x 10”


Pedro Albizu Compos Plate

2022
porcelain plate (thrown by Viola Quiles), underglaze, glaze,
9 x 9 x 1.5”


ABOUT


Leonardo Quiles (b.1971, Brooklyn, NY) creates illustrations, comics, and objects centered on the visual narrative of the postcolonial Latinx experience. Quiles considers his work a form of resistance against the totalitarian suppression of ethnic diversity in the US and its colonies. His interest in the social-political effects of cultural alienation and race politics feeds the images he uses. Through examining his own lived experience and that of friends and family, Quiles deftly narrates the abandonment of one’s ethnicity for the dominant culture.

Leonardo Quiles studied at Parsons School of Design and received his MFA from the renowned illustration department at Hartford Art School. His work has been included in exhibitions in New York, San Francisco, and locally at Stockbridge’s Norman Rockwell Museum. His work for the MTA’s Arts and Transit program has been seen on subways in and around New York City. His debut graphic novel as author/illustrator will be published in the Spring of 2024 by Macmillan Publishers. Leonardo currently lives and works in the Berkshires of Western Massachusetts.

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BECKIE KRAVETZ

BECKIE KRAVETZ

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 Undone

UNDONE


Beckie Kravetz
Undone
2022
stoneware, acrylic, resin, vintage balance scale, mixed media
14 x 17 x 38”

For this exhibition, I was asked to respond to a collection of historic, mass-market ceramic memorabilia, some of which depict racial stereotypes that both reflect and feed systemic racism in the United States. 

ABOUT


American
lives and works in Cummington, MA

 

Beckie Kravetzbegan her sculpture career as a theatrical mask maker. She received her training at the Yale School of Drama, the Centro Maschere e Strutture Gestuali in Italy, the Taller de Madera in Guatemala, and the Instituto Allende in San Miguel, Mexico. In 1988, she became the resident mask maker for the Los Angeles Opera, where she also worked as a principal makeup artist and assistant wig-master. Her skills have helped transform the faces of dozens of singers, including Placido Domingo, Sir Thomas Allen, Carol Vaness, Samuel Ramey, Gerald Finley, and Rod Gilfry.

A 1993 exhibition of her masks at Roark Gallery in Los Angeles led to the creation of Beckie’s first series of non-wearable, sculptural masks. Years of working with actors inspired her to explore the mask’s inner surface; the point of transformation between actor and character. Early works using painting and text on the inside of the face evolved into masks containing three-dimensional tableaus, as seen inside the faces of the Sculpted Arias series.

In 1998, the Los Angeles Opera hosted the premiere solo exhibition of Kravetz’s Sculpted Arias at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Select pieces in the series have subsequently been shown at the Metropolitan Opera Gallery, Tucson Museum of Art, Tucson MOCA, Tansey Contemporary Gallery (Santa Fe), the Seattle Opera Ring gallery, and several others. She continues to add to the Sculpted Arias series, including the array of characters from Wagner’s Ring Cycle, but her work is not limited to operatic themes.

Beckie’s recent exhibitions include contemporary figurative sculpture in bronze, ceramic and mixed media. She creates installations, figures interacting with masks, and portrait masks in the style of the Sculpted Arias, but depicting historical or contemporary individuals.  In addition to masks and sculpture, Beckie recently sculpted friezes, corbels and doorframes on the restoration of the historic Dutch House in Brookline, MA.  She continues her work as a makeup artist and wig master with Opera Roanoke and the new Berkshire Opera Festival.

Beckie Kravetz, “Undone”, 2022, stoneware, acrylic, resin, vintage balance scale, mixed media, 14 x 17 x 38”

ON HER WORK

My vision is inspired by 38 years as a theatrical mask-maker and principal makeup artist with Los Angeles Opera. The transformation of the human face fascinates me. My wearable masks eventually evolved into fine art masks containing sculpted interior dioramas: tiny stage sets revealing aspects of the character’s identity. Then, those masks evolved into heads and busts, then full figures.  Sometimes I combine figures with masks, showing individuals on the brink of resolution or change.  My choices of ceramic, bronze, resin, fabric, and mixed media further enrich my characters’ narrative.

Theater folks have long been aware of the mask’s power to both conceal and reveal. We have just come through a time in which masks were with all of us, every day.  This new context of masking in daily life, along with isolation and the need for connection inspire my latest bodies of work.  My sculptures, now unmasked, implore you to look into their eyes.

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JENNIFER LING DATCHUK

JENNIFER LING DATCHUK

Recently on view


ARTWORK & INSTALLATIONS

MY NECK, MY BACK, YOUR LABOR EXPECTATIONS ARE WHACK
(MY NECK, MY BACK ARE NOT YOUR TASTY SNACK)


These porcelain baby forms are cast from an antique Chinese export ware ceramic pillow form – made to prop up the head to protect hairstyles during sleep.  An uncomfortable form of labor to protect the façade of wealth and status.  I remade them to carry the weight of Asian women’s labor and they seem to have an expression of delight on their faces, while being in a table-top position, carrying things on their back—a nod to how Asian women experience fetishization while also laboring and providing service, product, resource.

Jennifer Ling Datchuk
my neck, my back, your labor expectations are whack
(my neck, my back are not your tasty snack)
2022
Laguna Clay Co. porcelain doll casting slip
9 x 9″

MADE BY AMERICAN CHINESE/ MADE BY CHINESE AMERICAN


Inspired by porcelain export ware shoes, I made a mold of a blue and white Victorian style boot and altered it to make cowgirl boots.Decorated and adorned with recontextualized imagery from the past to speak about current times, these boots depict my experiences of being a first generation, daughter of a Chinese immigrant.

I live with the constant question of “What are you?” and these capture my experiences of being half or both.The fringe of these boots are made from Asian hair that has been bleached and dyed to various colors.The global migrations of the hair industry from Asian to the West mimics the trade and migrations of Chinese porcelain as it traveled the world.

Jennifer Ling Datchuk
Made by American Chinese / Made by Chinese American
2022
porcelain and human hair
7 x 3 x 12″

LIVE TO DIE


Red doormats that say “welcome” in Chinese and English are found in front of almost every Chinese restaurant and business all over the world.  These mats are markers for crossing thresholds, the objects below our feet that welcome or receive us as we work, spend, desire and consume.  This red is symbolic of good luck and fortune in Chinese culture but synonymous with anger and passion.

The pallet rack with the stacks of mats embossed with the phrase “Live to Die”, a morality statement found at the bottom of alphabet samplers from the 1800’s.  This phrase stitched onto linen by the hands of young girls who probably did not fully understand the darkness and futility of these words.   

Disrupting the perfect stacks of doormats are golden figurines of a young Asian girl, barefoot, wearing a rice picker’s hat, and carrying a heavy load on a shoulder yoke.  They become buried under the weight of the mats, hidden and obscured but we know they are there.  Her labor and presence are invisible to the objects we so easily order and buy but so much a part of this cycle of consumption and fulfillment.  

I often think of the label “Made in China” and how its associated with objects that are cheaply and poorly made.   What makes their labor and bodies any less than that of American labor? We need to acknowledge and confront the capitalist systems in place that have created an American ruling class that for decades have put profits over people and continually exploit global inequality. 

Jennifer Ling Datchuk
Live to Die
2019
custom-printed red welcome mats, porcelain
varied dimensions (each mat is 30.5” x 22”) 40 mats total

EXOTIC AF


Exotic – a descriptor every Asian woman has probably heard and includes anyone that is foreign and different but beautiful and usually comes with a comment about your eyes. 

Exotic AF consists of a figurine from a hobbyist mold and from the 70’s or 80’s and probably existed in the realm of kitsch….and she is a stereotype of a China girl with her bob haircut and bands, rice picker hat, heavy shoulder yoke across back, dragon on her qipao, and she is barefoot….she rests on top of trophy case filled with broken shards of willow ware plates from Germany, England, Japan, and America.   Willow ware is the most appropriated blue and white pattern all the world that has no known origin, and she rests atop this contained rumble and keeps on working.

Jennifer Ling Datchuk
Exotic AF
2017
porcelain, blue and white willow ware ceramic shards from Germany, Netherlands, Japan, England, China, and USA, acrylic
15 x 9 x 8”

b. 1980, Warren, OH
lives and works in San Antonio, TX

 

Jennifer Ling Datchuk is an artist born in Warren, Ohio and raised in Brooklyn, New York.  Her work is an exploration of her layered identity – as a woman, a Chinese woman, as an “American,” as a third culture kid.

Trained in ceramics, Datchuk works with porcelain and other materials often associated with traditional women’s work, such as textiles and hair, to discuss fragility, beauty, femininity, intersectionality, identity, and personal history. Her practice evolved from sculpture to mixed media as she began to focus on domestic objects and the feminine sphere. Handwork and hair both became totems of the small rituals that fix, smooth over, and ground women’s lives. Through these materials, she explores how Western beauty standards influenced the East, how the non-white body is commodified and sold, and how women’s – globally, girls’ – work is still a major economic driver whose workers still struggle for equality.

Datchuk holds an MFA in Artisanry from the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and a BFA in Crafts from Kent State University. She has received grants from the Artist Foundation of San Antonio, travel grant from Artpace, and the Linda Lighton International Artist Exchange Program to research the global migrations of porcelain and blue and white pattern decoration. She was awarded a residency through the Blue Star Contemporary Art Museum to conduct her studio practice at the Kßnstlerhaus Bethanien in Berlin, Germany and has participated in residencies at the Pottery Workshop in Jingdezhen, China, Vermont Studio Center, European Ceramic Work Center in the Netherlands and Artpace in San Antonio, Texas.  In 2017, she received the Emerging Voices award from the American Craft Council and in 2020 was named a United States Artist Fellow in Craft.  

She is an Assistant Professor of Studio Art at Texas State University and lives and maintains a studio practice in San Antonio, Texas.

Jennifer Ling Datchuk, “Made by Chinese American”, 2022, porcelain, human hair, 7 x 3 x 12”

ON MADE BY AMERICAN CHINESE/ MADE BY CHINESE AMERICAN

Inspired by porcelain export ware shoes, I made a mold of a blue and white Victorian style boot and altered it to make cowgirl boots. Decorated and adorned with recontextualized imagery from the past to speak about current times, these boots depict my experiences of being a first generation, daughter of a Chinese immigrant.

I live with the constant question of “What are you?” and these capture my experiences of being half or both. The fringe of these boots are made from Asian hair that has been bleached and dyed to various colors. The global migrations of the hair industry from Asian to the West mimics the trade and migrations of Chinese porcelain as it traveled the world.

Jennifer Ling Datchuk, “Live to Die”, 2019, 40 mats, Custom-printed red welcome mats, porcelain, each mat is 30.5 x 22”

ON LIVE TO DIE

Red doormats that say “welcome” in Chinese and English are found in front of almost every Chinese restaurant and business all over the world.  These mats are markers for crossing thresholds, the objects below our feet that welcome or receive us as we work, spend, desire and consume.  This red is symbolic of good luck and fortune in Chinese culture but synonymous with anger and passion.

The pallet rack with the stacks of mats embossed with the phrase “Live to Die”, a morality statement found at the bottom of alphabet samplers from the 1800’s.  This phrase stitched onto linen by the hands of young girls who probably did not fully understand the darkness and futility of these words.   

Disrupting the perfect stacks of doormats are golden figurines of a young Asian girl, barefoot, wearing a rice picker’s hat, and carrying a heavy load on a shoulder yoke.  They become buried under the weight of the mats, hidden and obscured but we know they are there.  Her labor and presence are invisible to the objects we so easily order and buy but so much a part of this cycle of consumption and fulfillment.  

I often think of the label “Made in China” and how its associated with objects that are cheaply and poorly made.   What makes their labor and bodies any less than that of American labor? We need to acknowledge and confront the capitalist systems in place that have created an American ruling class that for decades have put profits over people and continually exploit global inequality. 

Jennifer Ling Datchuk, “Exotic AF”, sideways view, 2017, porcelain, blue and white willow ware ceramic shards from Germany, Netherlands, Japan, England, China, and USA, acrylic, 15 x 9 x 8”.

ON EXOTIC AF

Exotic – a descriptor every Asian woman has probably heard and includes anyone that is foreign and different but beautiful and usually comes with a comment about your eyes. 

Exotic AF consists of a figurine from a hobbyist mold and from the 70’s or 80’s and probably existed in the realm of kitsch….and she is a stereotype of a China girl with her bob haircut and bands, rice picker hat, heavy shoulder yoke across back, dragon on her qipao, and she is barefoot….she rests on top of trophy case filled with broken shards of willow ware plates from Germany, England, Japan, and America.   Willow ware is the most appropriated blue and white pattern all the world that has no known origin, and she rests atop this contained rumble and keeps on working.

EXHIBITIONS


Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in "Our America/Whose America?". Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in “Our America/Whose America?”. Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

2024 | Group Exhibition in the Wickham House at the Valentine Museum | Richmond, VA

February 20, 2024 – April 21, 2024

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

View the exhibition page HERE

Ferrin Contemporary “Our America/Whose America?” Library Installation at the Wickham House, Richmond, VA, 2024

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 Made by American Chinese/ Made by Chinese American

INQUIRE


Warning
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CRANK

CRANK

FEATURED ARTWORKS

AGENT ORANGE


CRANK
Agent Orange
2019
coiled red earthenware – Kid Tested Mother Approved
13 x 13 x 22″

INTERGALACTIC PLANETARY


CRANK
Intergalactic Planetary
2019
coiled red earthenware – Kid Tested Mother Approved
13 x 13 x 22″

THIS IS AMERICA…DON’T CATCH YOU SLIPPING UP


CRANK
This is America…Don’t Catch You Slipping Up
2019
coiled red earthenware – Kid Tested Mother Approved
13 x 13 x 22″

These pieces are by the artist entity CRANK who uses traditional Native American vessel forms and red earthenware clay that are then painted with underglazes including 18 karat gold highlights to create pop-culture motifs.

ABOUT


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BIO

CV

CRANK


CRANK, born on November 22, 1963, the day of John F. Kennedy’s assassination which coincided with the death of American innocence, is an outlier, a miscreant, a genderless artist entity that is not necessarily human. CRANK absorbs pop culture, current events, world history, literature, music, and the art market to create works that grab the viewer by the collar. CRANK’s mash up of contemporary American consumption – cultural icons, corporate logos, and sculptural shape – creates narratives that question the idea of ownership in a combination of past, present, and future. Every element of a CRANK work including the title, price, form, and content remains essential to the work itself, acting as a cue to the works’ layered meaning. CRANK attempts to flip notions of control and without a concrete identity, CRANK becomes the game itself rather than the player in both the art market and society at large. With recent acquisitions from well-respected curators and institutions including the Heard Museum, CRANK has garnered critical praise in a very short time for describing life in the twenty-first century.

CRANK vases, installation view, 2019, coiled red earthenware – Kid Tested Mother Approved, 13 x 13 x 22″

ON THEIR WORK IN OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

These pieces are by the artist entity CRANK who uses traditional Native American vessel forms and red earthenware clay that are then painted with underglazes including 18 karat gold highlights to create pop-culture motifs.

FEATURED EXHIBITIONS

Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in "Our America/Whose America?". Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in “Our America/Whose America?”. Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

2024 | Group Exhibition in the Wickham House at the Valentine Museum | Richmond, VA

February 20, 2024 – April 21, 2024

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

View the exhibition page HERE

Ferrin Contemporary “Our America/Whose America?” Drawing Room Installation at the Wickham House, Richmond, VA, 2024

CRANK vases, installation view, 2019, coiled red earthenware – Kid Tested Mother Approved, 13 x 13 x 22″

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

Our America/Whose America? Installation View, 2022

INQUIRE


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MICHELLE ERICKSON

MICHELLE ERICKSON

ARTWORK

POTTER’S FIELD


Michelle Erickson
Potter’s Field
2011
slip decorated earthenware using open trailing method of 18th century Staffordshire slipware traditions
40 x 36”

SUPERFLY DRAGON EWER


Michelle Erickson
Superfly Dragon Ewer
2015
hand-built and sprig molded indigenous Virginia clays. Inspired by an 18th century Vauxhall porcelain ewer from the V&A collection
11.5 x 9 x 3.5″

AM I NOT SHELL DISHES


Michelle Erickson
Am I Not Shell Dishes
2013
Porcelain thrown and press molded with enamel and and transfer print.
11.5 x 9 x 3.5″

COLORED SQUIRRELS


Michelle Erickson
Colored Squirrels
2016
commercially colored porcelains cast and hand-built from Erickson’s original molds and life cast oyster shells and grenades
10-12″ x 7-9″ x 4″ (each)

MICHELLE ERICKSON


Photo by Robert Hunter

ABOUT


American, b. 1960 in Hampton, VA
lives and works in Hampton, VA

Michelle Erickson has a BFA from the College of William and Mary and is an independent ceramic artist and scholar.  Internationally recognized for her mastery of colonial era ceramic techniques her pieces reinvent ceramic history to create 21st century social political and environmental narratives. Her ceramic art is represented in major museums including the Museum of Art and Design NY, the Seattle Art Museum and the Victoria and Albert Museum. Ms. Erickson’s rediscovery of historical ceramics techniques is widely published and her contemporary art is profiled in numerous national and international publications.  She has lectured widely at institutions that include The Potteries Museums Stoke on Trent, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Milwaukee Art Museum, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art. She has designed and produced ceramics for major motion pictures such as The Patriot, and HBO’s series John Adams. 

In 2012 Michelle was artist in residence as a World Class Maker at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London where she collaborated with Nike’s 2012 Olympic Track and Field Innovation and created three exciting short videos produced by the V&A and the Chipstone Foundation.  

Erickson’s recent solo exhibitions include Conversations In Clay at Virginia MOCA 2015, You & I Are …Earth  at Wilton House Museum, Richmond VA 2016 and Michelle Erickon Distilled, The Last Drop Project at the NC Pottery Center 2018 profiled in Ceramics in America 2018. American Pickle Museum of the American Revolution December 2018. Wild Porcelain Legion of Honor Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, October 2021- September 2022

Ms Erickson was a finalist for the 2016 Gibbes Museum of Art 1858 Prize. Michelle’s 21stcentury protest ceramics are included in the historic exhibition Breaking the Chains: Ceramics and the Abolitionist Movement 2019 at The Reeves Collection Washington & Lee University. Her art was recently featured in Reshaped: Ceramics Through Time Christies London May 2019. Michelle is part of the invitational exhibition project Another Crossing: Artists Revisit the Mayflower Voyage, Fuller Craft Museum, MA July – October 2021, The Box Plymouth UK spring 2022.

Michelle Erickson, “The Party’s Over”, 2018, slipcast porcelain, artist’s designed ceramic transfers, overglaze, hand painted gold enamel, luster, 14 x 18 x 2″

ON HER WORK IN OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

Michelle Erickson’s satirical ceramic transfer The Party’s Over was created in 2014 and adapts Paul Revere’s 1774 engraving The Able Doctor as a modern reinvention of the use of ceramics as a democratic means for social and political commentary. Transposed portraits of key contemporary self-proclaimed ‘tea party’ politicians and activists fit alarmingly well into this brutal 18th century satire. Her latest iteration in the Party Platter series, incorporates a large version of the composition depicting the violation of an allegorical America and dually represents the broader notion of an imperiled Liberty facilitated greatly by Citizens United. Most specifically the piece speaks to the inconceivable plight of women’s rights at risk in 21st century America.

Party Platter describes America’s current political landscape through the lens of American revolutionary history. The founding of American democracy is based on the ideals of Equality Justice and Liberty but the realities of colonialism continues to challenge our Democracy in the 21st century. The original sins of Indigenous genocide, the inhumanity of slavery, and the inequity and subjugation of women are deep wounds in the American contract yet to be healed. Republican Tea party politics embodied in the Trump Presidency has exposed the wounds of institutional racism, cultural and environmental injustice and the assault on women’s rights in the 21st century.

– Michelle Erickson

RECENT EXHIBITIONS

Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in "Our America/Whose America?". Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in “Our America/Whose America?”. Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

2024 | Group Exhibition in the Wickham House at the Valentine Museum | Richmond, VA

February 20, 2024 – April 21, 2024

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

View the exhibition page HERE

Ferrin Contemporary “Our America/Whose America?” Office Installation at the Wickham House, Richmond, VA, 2024

Our America/Whose America? Installation, Michelle Erickson, Jason Walker, photo credit: John Polak

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:

THE PARTY’S OVER


Michelle Erickson
The Party’s Over
2018
slipcast porcelain, artist’s designed ceramic transfers, overglaze, hand painted gold enamel, luster
14 x 18 x 2”

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MOMOKO USAMI

MOMOKO USAMI

ARTWORK

WITNESS #2


Momoko Usami
“Witness #2”
2022
porcelain, glaze, mirror, copper, silver chain
15 x 23 x 6”

This is a piece in the ‘Witness’ series I made that document what’s happening in this pivotal moment in history, especially in the U.S., in a form of cowrie shell that mimics the eye. I’ve been using cowrie shell as a motif for a while. I was interested in cowrie that spread around the world even inland because they were used in currency, and also used in fortune telling and as amulet. Now use of cowrie shell as amulet sticks with me as the world seems to be falling apart. The pupil turns around, and the other side of the pupil is silver surface to ask audience “when this was happening, what did you do?”.

— Momoko Usami

ROCK OF ANGER (INSURRECTION)


Momoko Usami
“Rock of Anger (Insurrection)”
2022
porcelain
11.5 x 11.5 x 1.5″

This is one of my projects documenting the rise of anger and hate in everyday life in the US. The first Rock of Anger plate was triggered by the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia in 2017, with a hope to contain growing anger and hate shut into a secret rock to seal it. However, not only anger and hate could not be sealed, it was all unleashed by Trump’s leadership of white supremacy in plain view. After the January 6th Storming of the Capital, I made second and third Rock of Anger plates, titled ‘Insurrection’ and ‘Consequences’. On the plate ‘Insurrection’, I drew people actively trying to destroy the secret rock that is plugged and sealed with propaganda stickers containing anger and hate. In the plate ‘Consequences’, the anger and hate blows up so big that it is leaking out from the crack on the secret rock. On the back of the plates, I drew a map that mimicked Trump’s face. The Latin in the back says “Here be Anger, Fear, and Hate”.

— Momoko Usami

ROCK OF ANGER (CONSEQUENCES)


Momoko Usami
“Rock of Anger (Consequences)”
2022
porcelain
11.25 x 11.15 x 1.5″

Vision and Time are the two unspoken agreements to share the world you live. At the same time, they are very obscure and ambiguous. They are affected by his or her own background, memory, preference, or a feeling, colors, and temperature at the moment. Therefore, images in the real world are always fluid and beguiled; there is no frame and no ending. I attempt to express my interest in how people choose their own view. Real world images are full of temporal beauty and interest.

My work deals with eternal touchable materials such as clay, metal, and resin, or fragile images such as light, shadow and reflection. I use everyday phenomena as some of the important elements because it endows everyone fairly and it makes my work personable. I attempt to grasp a wobble and nonsense in the real world, and to make people uncover fresh views even in the mundane, in their everyday life. My interest in real life makes us think about observing the world carefully.

Now more than ever, artists have a responsibility in society to document what’s happening in the world to pass it on to future generations, and to help heal broken hearts with curiosity and beauty.

— Momoko Usami

MOMOKO USAMI


Japanese, b. 1980, Japan
lives and works in Barnard, MO
Pronouns (she/her)

Momoko Usami received a BFA and an MFA from Kyoto City University of Art in Kyoto, Japan, and moved to the United States in January 2008. A resident artist at Lillstreet Art Center in Chicago in 2009-2010, Momoko went on to establish her personal studio in the countryside near Kansas City, Missouri, where she started Art Farm in 2014, hosting small art classes for the community. Momoko draws inspiration from many things, including Japanese painting from the Edo period, dreams, and daily encounters on the street. Her unique, playful, and often interactive ceramic works have been shown in the United States, Canada, and Japan.

Momoko Usami, “Rock of Anger (Consequences)”, 2022, porcelain, 11.25 x 11.15 x 1.5″, image courtesy of John Polak

ON HER WORK

Vision and Time are the two unspoken agreements to share the world you live. At the same time, they are very obscure and ambiguous. They are affected by his or her own background, memory, preference, or a feeling, colors, and temperature at the moment. Therefore, images in the real world are always fluid and beguiled; there is no frame and no ending. I attempt to express my interest in how people choose their own view. Real world images are full of temporal beauty and interest.

My work deals with eternal touchable materials such as clay, metal, and resin, or fragile images such as light, shadow and reflection. I use everyday phenomena as some of the important elements because it endows everyone fairly and it makes my work personable. I attempt to grasp a wobble and nonsense in the real world, and to make people uncover fresh views even in the mundane, in their everyday life. My interest in real life makes us think about observing the world carefully.

Now more than ever, artists have a responsibility in society to document what’s happening in the world to pass it on to future generations, and to help heal broken hearts with curiosity and beauty.

— Momoko Usami

Momoko Usami, “Witness #2- Reclaimers”, detail, 2022, porcelain, glaze, mirror, copper, silver chain, 15 x 23 x 6”, Elise Gagliardi Photography

ON WITNESS #2

This is a piece in the ‘Witness’ series I made that document what’s happening in this pivotal moment in history, especially in the U.S., in a form of cowrie shell that mimics the eye. I’ve been using cowrie shell as a motif for a while. I was interested in cowrie that spread around the world even inland because they were used in currency, and also used in fortune telling and as amulet. Now use of cowrie shell as amulet sticks with me as the world seems to be falling apart. The pupil turns around, and the other side of the pupil is silver surface to ask audience “when this was happening, what did you do?”.

— Momoko Usami

Momoko Usami, "Rock of Anger (Insurrection)", 2022, detail, porcelain, 11.5 x 11.5 x 1.5", image courtesy of John Polak

Momoko Usami, “Rock of Anger (Insurrection)”, 2022, detail, porcelain, 11.5 x 11.5 x 1.5″, image courtesy of John Polak

ON ROCKER OF ANGER (INSURRECTION) & (CONSEQUENCES)

This is one of my projects documenting the rise of anger and hate in everyday life in the US. The first Rock of Anger plate was triggered by the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia in 2017, with a hope to contain growing anger and hate shut into a secret rock to seal it. However, not only anger and hate could not be sealed, it was all unleashed by Trump’s leadership of white supremacy in plain view. After the January 6th Storming of the Capital, I made second and third Rock of Anger plates, titled ‘Insurrection’ and ‘Consequences’. On the plate ‘Insurrection’, I drew people actively trying to destroy the secret rock that is plugged and sealed with propaganda stickers containing anger and hate. In the plate ‘Consequences’, the anger and hate blows up so big that it is leaking out from the crack on the secret rock. On the back of the plates, I drew a map that mimicked Trump’s face. The Latin in the back says “Here be Anger, Fear, and Hate”.

— Momoko Usami

PAST EXHIBITIONS

Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in "Our America/Whose America?". Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

Ferrin Contemporary presents Paul Scott in “Our America/Whose America?”. Installation for NCECA Richmond, 2024 at the Wickham House at The Valentine Museum, Richmond, VA. Image courtesy of The Valentine Museum.

OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

2024 | Group Exhibition in the Wickham House at the Valentine Museum | Richmond, VA

February 20, 2024 – April 21, 2024

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

View the exhibition page HERE

Ferrin Contemporary “Our America/Whose America?” Dining Room Installation at the Wickham House, Richmond, VA, 2024

Our America/Whose America? Installation, 2022, image courtesy of John Polak

Our America/Whose America? Installation, 2022, image courtesy of John Polak

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

INQUIRE


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

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

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