Project Type: ARTISTS

CRISTINA CÓRDOVA: EVA XV

CRISTINA CÓRDOVA: EVA XV

EVA XV
2022

unglazed: finished with burnished earth pigments from the island of Puerto Rico mixed with casein, lime, and oxides
60 x 18 x 22″

EVA XV

RECENTLY ON VIEW

Cristina Córdova, “EVA XV”, on view in the Spanish Colonial Gallery at the Figge Art Museum, Davenport, Iowa, 2024

2024 | Installation at the Figge Art Museum, Spanish Colonial Gallery
Davenport, IA

On view through 2024

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

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, "Are We There Yet?", 2023, Exhibition Installation View with work by Chris Antemann, Cristina Córdova, Sergei Isupov, Crystal Morey, & Kurt Weiser, Photo by John Polak Photography

Ferrin Contemporary, “Are We There Yet?”, 2023, Exhibition Installation View with work by Chris Antemann, Cristina Córdova, Sergei Isupov, Crystal Morey, & Kurt Weiser, Photo by John Polak Photography

ARE WE THERE YET?

2024 | Group Exhibition at Ferrin Contemporary | North Adams, MA

July 15 – September 2, 2023

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

View the exhibition page HERE

Cristina Córdova, “EVA XV”, 2022, Installation in Figuring Space, at The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, PA

FIGURING SPACE

2024 | Group Exhibition at The Clay Studio | Philadelphia, PA

January 12 – April 16, 2023

The group of powerful, full-scale representations of human figures will serve as a body of evidence to lay bare the issues that permeate American art and social culture. Each of the artists chosen uses the figure to usurp the painful history of bodies on display in American history. They assert their autonomy and subjectivity by presenting cultural critiques through lenses of their own choosing: race, gender, class, and anti-war ideas. Roberto Lugo, Kensuke Yamada, Cristina Córdova, Chris Rodgers, Sergei Isupov, Christina West, Tip Toland, Jonathan Christensen Caballero, George Rodriguez, Roxanne Swentzell, and Kyungmin Park are among the invited artists.

ABOUT “EVA XV”


More on Cristina Córdova HERE

I have been sculpting my daughter since she was 9. This 15 year old version of Eva is unglazed and finished with burnished earth pigments from the island of Puerto Rico mixed with casein, lime, and oxides. They came specifically from two areas, one in Fajardo near the coast, where the rainforest is, and one from Orocovis in the mountainous center. Written on her back are the words “de monte y mar” ( “from mountain and sea” ) in gold, a phrase from the song Verde luz by El Topo (Antonio Cabal Vale), which became a symbol of national Puerto Rican pride and an anti-colonialist anthem.

In my practice, the image of Eva is the embodiment of change and possibility. It speaks to the inevitability of transience and the inherited threads of code that perpetuate both genes and identity. This piece seeks to perform both as a symbol and a relic by holding in its materiality a part of the Island that has thematically bound this whole series through the years, exploring the riches and vulnerabilities of this small Caribbean nation that is my home.

JACQUELINE BISHOP: Fauna

JACQUELINE BISHOP: Fauna

Fauna
2024
digital print on commercial porcelain, gold lustre
various dimensions

FAUNA

Tea Service | Limited Edition Set 

RECENTLY ON VIEW

Jacqueline Bishop,"Fauna (Tea Service)", 2024, digital print on porcelain, gold lustre, Tea Set with Teapot, Cup, Saucer, Cream Pitcher, Sugar Pot, Rectangular Plate, Oval Plate; Teapot: 6 x 9 x 5.5".

Jacqueline Bishop,”Fauna (Tea Service)”, 2024, digital print on porcelain, gold lustre, Tea Set with Teapot, Cup, Saucer, Cream Pitcher, Sugar Pot, Rectangular Plate, Oval Plate; Teapot: 6 x 9 x 5.5″.

if you should forget me for a while

Exhibition at Sienna Patti Contemporary
June 27 through August 25, 2024
Lenox, MA

Featuring work by Jacqueline Bishop, Melanie Bilenker, Venetia Dale, & Lauren Kalman

ABOUT “FAUNA”


More on Jacqueline Bishop HERE

Jacqueline Bishop’s interdisciplinary practice is focused on making visible the ephemeral, in speaking aloud the unspoken, in telling untold stories and voicing voicelessness. Bishop is acutely aware of what it means to be simultaneously an insider and an outsider having lived longer outside of her birthplace of Jamaica than on the island itself. This has allowed her to view a given environment from a distance.

Fauna arises out of Bishop’s long-standing questions about the position of black women in Caribbean society. Her first collection of poems published in 2006, also titled ‘Fauna’, used Caribbean flowers as metaphors to explore the lives of enslaved women. Bishop sees this new commissioned work as a visual manifestation of these poems.

Further research revealed that prior to the ending of the slave trade there was no attention given to either the maternal health of pregnant women or their babies. Where and to whom did enslaved women turn when they were trying to conceive, could not conceive or found themselves with unwanted pregnancies? The answer lay in the plants, flowers, fruits and herbs of Jamaica. Each one contained a unique botanical element that could either end an unwanted pregnancy or encourage fertility. In Fauna Bishop has surrounded the women and their children with healing and protective herbs. Indeed, in one case, the mother is offering her child up to the arms of the natural environment.

Fauna was commissioned by The Harris and will go on display when the museum re- opens in Spring 2025. Unveiling overlooked and brutal histories of slavery and colonialism, Bishop’s work is an important acquisition for The Harris’ ceramic collection. Creating dialogues with other pieces in The Harris’ collection, most importantly an oil painting recently identified as ‘A Jamaica Landscape’ (c. 1774), attributed to George Robertson, Bishop said that her work “intervenes in the idyllic presentation of slavery and enslavement of the painting to present enslaved women using the environment to shield themselves and their children. Both works speak to each other.” Both works will be displayed together as this timely acquisition will play an integral part in a new display exploring the global history of tea, weaving together histories of British Empire, Colonialism and the Transatlantic Slave Trade.

Jacqueline Bishop (b. 1971, Kingston, Jamaica) lives and works in New York and Miami, Florida. Bishop worked with Emma Price; a British ceramicist based in Stoke- on-Trent in the former Spode factories in the realisation of this new work.

Recent exhibition solo exhibitions include British Art Studies, Paul Mellon Center, London (2022); SRO Gallery, Brooklyn, New York (2018); Meyerhoff Gallery, Baltimore, Maryland (2016). Recent group exhibitions include The Valentine Museum, Richmond, Virginia (2024); Gardiner Museum, Toronto, Ontario, CA (2024); Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (2023); Ferrin Contemporary, North Adams, MA (2022); British Ceramics Biennial (2021); Stoke-on-Trent (2021) and Jamaica Biennial, National Gallery of Jamaica. Kingston (2017).

NEWS

New Acquisition: Fauna by Jacqueline Bishop

The Harris is thrilled to announce a new acquisition to our collection, presented by the Contemporary Art Society

Jacqueline Bishop’s interdisciplinary masterpiece, ‘Fauna’, sheds light on overlooked narratives of enslaved women in Caribbean society. Commissioned by The Harris, this evocative ceramic work intertwines botanical elements with maternal themes, unveiling poignant stories of resilience. Displaying alongside historical pieces, ‘Fauna’ sparks dialogues on the global history of tea and colonialism. Don’t miss its unveiling in Spring 2025!

READ MORE HERE

Jacqueline Bishop, “Fauna”, 2024, digital print on porcelain, gold lustre, Simon Critchley Photography

JACQUELINE BISHOP: The Narratives of Migration

JACQUELINE BISHOP: The Narratives of Migration

The Narratives of Migration
edition of 3
2024
digital print on commercial porcelain, gold lustre
11 x 11 x .5

NARRATIVES OF MIGRATION

Limited Edition Set | Edition of 3

ABOUT “THE NARRATIVES OF MIGRATION”


More on Jacqueline Bishop HERE

The series of plates derives its title from a poem I wrote which traces various migrations within my family. As a child growing up on the island of Jamaica, I never knew my mother’s father, but I knew that he lived in England where he had another family. My mother and her brother– his children– were left back on the island of Jamaica. 

Jamaica’s relationship with England began in 1655 when, having failed to wrest Cuba from Spain, the English settled on Jamaica as a secondary prize. While I grew up in an independent country (achieved from England in 1962) England still loomed large in my consciousness as a child born in the 1970s. Even today, the British Monarch remains Head of State of Jamaica, which is part of the Commonwealth. 

In this work, it is both my family’s history and a larger English/Jamaican history that I have sought to trace. These plates consist of family photographs of my grandmother, my mother, and my mother’s brother in Jamaica, and my grandfather, his wife, and my aunts in England. They reference the recent Windrush scandal whereby British citizens from the Caribbean living in the UK for decades were being deported back to the Caribbean, and they tell a longer story of enslavement. Replete are images of the flora and fauna of the Caribbean which would be taken from the island to fill English gardens and give rise to the field of Natural history. Also included are the icons of nationalism developed for Jamaica by the British. 

What these plates show is that in both personal and political terms, the relationship between Jamaica and the UK is one that is enduring.  

-Jacqueline Bishop

NEWS

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

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

Underneath Everything: Humility and Grandeur in Contemporary Ceramics

Underneath Everything: Humility and Grandeur in Contemporary Ceramics

UNDERNEATH EVERYTHING: HUMILITY AND GRANDEUR IN CONTEMPORARY CERAMICS


Traveling exhibition shown nationally  |  2023 – Present

Featuring works by Rae Stern

During an artist lecture in December 2021, Theaster Gates evoked a fascinating paradox in contemporary ceramics practice. Clay is the humblest of materials, often overlooked and more readily associated with a morning cup of coffee than with the international art world. But it is underneath everything. There is an expansiveness to work made or based in this medium, as artists push the limitations of clay, attaching layers of conceptual meaning and playing with the boundaries between ceramics and other media including film, photography, painting, performance, and installation.

This exhibition features artworks that honor the humility of the medium while simultaneously evoking a sense of grandeur and possibility.

Underneath Everything: Humility and Grandeur in Contemporary Ceramics is organized by the Des Moines Art Center in consultation with an Artist Advisory Committee including Katayoun Amjadi, Donté K. Hayes, Ingrid Lilligren, and Chuck Purviance.

Featuring work by

Rae Stern


101 Monroe Center St NW
Grand Rapids, MI 49503

FEATURING RAE STERN


More on Rae Stern HERE

ABOUT RAE STERN


Rae Stern’s practice employs digital tools in the manipulation of multiple media including ceramics, photography, paper, and textiles. After a decade in the high-tech industry, her work is concerned with the social and cultural effects of technology. Between 2009 and 2018, Stern collaborated with Aya Margulis under the name Doda Design and created several bodies of work. Recent residencies include the Penland School of Crafts, Anderson Ranch, and Belger Crane Yard Studios. Stern has received grants from Asylum Arts, the Schusterman Foundation, and Belger Arts.

Stern’s work has been exhibited internationally at The Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art, Eretz Israel Museum (Tel Aviv, Israel), Belger Arts (Kansas City, MO), Harvard University (Boston, MA), and Medalta Museum, (Alberta, Canada). Her work is included in the collection of Eretz Israel Museum, as well as numerous private collections in Israel and the USA. Stern completed her undergraduate degree in psychology and communications at Tel Aviv University followed by a master’s degree in design from the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design.

ALL ARTISTS


Katayoun Amjadi
Eliza Au
Sally Binard
Paul Briggs
Candice J. Davis
Edmund de Waal
Theaster Gates
Donté Hayes

Simone Leigh
Anina Major
Heidi McKenzie
Magdalene A.N. Odundo DBE
Vick Quezada
Ibrahim Said
Rae Stern
Ehren Tool
Ai Weiwei

VIRTUAL TOUR


UNDERNEATH EVERYTHING: HUMILITY AND GRANDEUR IN CONTEMPORARY CERAMICS

Des Moines Art Center
Des Moines, IA

UNDERNEATH EVERYTHING


PAST PROGRAMMING

UNDERNEATH EVERYTHING

Published by The Des Moines Art Center


EXHIBITION CATALOG

Underneath Everything Humility and Grandeur in Contemporary Ceramics Catalog

$25.00 | 10% off for Members

Purchase the catalog HERE


UNDERNEATH EVERYTHING: HUMILITY AND GRANDEUR IN CONTEMPORARY CERAMICS, organized by Mia Laufer, Associate Curator at the Des Moines Art Center.

DES MOINES ART CENTER
June 3—September 10, 2023

GRAND RAPIDS ART MUSEUM
October 7, 2023—January 13, 2024

The exhibition and catalogue were supported by: The Harriet S. and J. Locke Macomber Art Center Fund, EMC Insurance Companies and Toni and Tim Urban International Artist-in-Residence Fund.

DESIGNER
Goizane Esain Mullin, Des Moines, Iowa

EDITOR
Sheila Mauck | Des Moines, Iowa

TRANSLATION
Iowa International Center, Des Moines, IA

PRINTER
Point B Solutions, Minneapolis, MN

ISBN: 978-1-879003-81-1

Library of Congress Control Number: 2023906097

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

SERGEI ISUPOV

SERGEI ISUPOV

FEATURED WORKS


USSR

All Were Once Children

Friendly Fight

Overwork

NEW WORKS FROM THE STUDIO


Ancestor

Lips, Eyes, Ear, Eyebrows

AVAILABLE ARTWORKS & SERIES


SERGEI ISUPOV: PAST & PRESENT


2022 | Solo Exhibition at Ferrin Contemporary

Ceramic sculptures are presented with both a multi-dimensional, mixed-media wall installation and independent pedestal-based works. Isupov and Ferrin Contemporary have had exhibitions internationally since 1996. This was the artist’s third solo show in our North Adams gallery location.

Both of Isupov’s 2022 exhibitions include works in porcelain and mixed-media drawings produced at Project Art in Cummington, MA. 

Past & Present

Full Moon Addiction

Like An Eternity

Marriage for the Ages

Momentary Darkness

Nature is Within Us

ANDROGYNY


HEADS & BUSTS

The Androgyny series of heads and busts, often with surrealistic features and complex facial expressions, was first presented by Ferrin Gallery in 2008 (Pittsfield, MA Location). The works were exhibited in his groundbreaking solo show at Mesa Contemporary Arts Center (Mesa, AZ) and traveled to the Daum Museum of Art (Sedalia, MO) in 2009. Isupov returns to this scale and series with the most recent work Heritage featured in Alliances (Keene, NH) in 2023. Select pieces remain in the artist’s archive available for exhibition, public and private collections. 

Soul of the Planet

Heritage

2009 | “Androgyny: New Work by Sergei Isupov”, Daum Museum of Contemporary Art, Sedalia, MO, October 3 – December 6, 2009

2009 | “Androgyny”, Mesa Contemporary Arts Center, Mesa, AZ, April 10 – August 2, 2009

2008 | “Androgyny, The Preview, Solo Exhibition: Sculpture, Painting, Drawing”; Ferrin Gallery, Pittsfield, MA

“My work is about contrasts and relationships. I explore contrasts of human condition with my story lines such as male-female and human-animal relationships, and accompanying emotions of warmth and aggression, love and rejection, and nurture and abandonment. Dynamic and interactive narratives are developed using two and three dimensions at the same time with the sculpted form and painted surface. I use a visual vocabulary and classic tools of design, proportion, perspective and silhouette to both sculpt and paint. Eyes show emotional relationships. Facial and figural gestures develop personalities. Illusionary objects and perspectives suggest motion. As a viewer moves around the work, they see each angle and focus point leading to new chapters and story lines. Combined, these clues tell an overall story.”

Busker

Chosen One

Guardian

Horsepower

Man

Midnight Son

FIGURAL SCULPTURE


“Art is a life style for me.  Everything that surrounds and excites me is automatically processed and transformed into the final result: an artwork.  It is fascinating to watch the transitions from life to art. The essence of my work is not in the medium or the creative process, but the in 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.

I find ceramic to be the most versatile material and it is well suited to the expression of my ideas.   I consider sculpture to be a canvas for my paintings. All plastic, graphic and painting elements of the piece function as complementary parts of the work.

In this series of two-legged figures, Statuettes, the form is classical but the characters are comical.  I like the contrast of serious to humorous – the front is cartoon like but the back of each figure features an intimate painting of the being’s spirit.  

While each one expresses an individual personality or character, as a group, they become a population, inhabitants of my imaginary world or visitors from my imagination.”

Hidden Messages

Game Changer

Puppeteer

Silver Anniversary

HUMANIMALS


Humanimals, transform anthropomorphic sculptures that explore human relationships by blending the expression and gesture of the combined species.

A sculptural surrealist, Isupov first created works in the Humanimal Series around 2011, with a set of “standing figures” (animal/human hybrids) and “riders” (animal figures on animal/human hybrids)

In 2015 Isupov returned to his iconic form of the Humanimal, a series of standing oversized figurines. New groups and works emerge as the artist delves into the right form for each of his concepts. Close Your Eyes Open Your Eyes, Burden II, Butterfly Catcher, Life’s Work, and Strong hail from multiple eras in the artist’s exploration of the series.

“The animal faces and features represent the beast or natural animal instincts that are often in conflict with reason and intellect.

The hand represents the hand of a human or god – both a comforting support for humanity and a force of opposition or challenge to animal instincts.

The two sculptures explore these ideas of opposing forces of nature and humanity, man and beast, integral and constant throughout life.  There is nothing literal intended in the choice of imagery or narrative.  The images and expressions are of male/female/animal – symbolic, metaphoric, and intended to provide for individual interpretation. ”

Close Your Eyes, Open Your Eyes

Butterfly Catcher

Burden II

Life’s Work

Strong

LARGE WORKS, INSTALLATIONS, & TABLEAUS


Challenged by opportunities to expand his scale, Isupov’s recent exhibition Alliances featured a wall relief sculpture using the carved plywood printing plate (left) and the resulting print (right) bringing together ceramic sculpture, assemblage, and printmaking practices to show the full scope of creative versatility and process. Towering larger than life figures and animated life size tableaus anchor his solo exhibitions in galleries and museums. 

Lips Eyes Ear Eyebrow

Woodblock & Print | Installation

Directions

Coffee & Milk

On the Way

PUBLIC ARTWORK


Fire sculptures, public art, engage the public in community based projects. Isupov currently has 3 public works on view along Main Street in Cummington, MA and more around the world. 

Everything is Upside Down

Miss Comet

SERGEI ISUPOV


Sergei Isupov Artist Portrait, 2021, Photo Credit: John Polak

ABOUT


Estonian-American, b. 1963 Stavropole, USSR,
lives and works between Cummington, MA, USA and Tallinn, Estonia

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 ceramics using traditional hand-building and sculpting techniques to combine surface and form with narrative painting using colored stains highlighted with clear glaze.

Isupov has a long international resume with work included in numerous collections and exhibitions, including the National Gallery of Australia, Museum Angewandte in Kunst, Germany, and in the US at the Carnegie Museum of Art, Crocker Art Museum, Everson Museum of Art, Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, Museum of Arts and Design, Museum of Fine Arts–Boston, Museum of Fine Arts–Houston, Mint Museum of Art, and Racine Art Museum. In 2017, his solo exhibition at The Erie Art Museum presented selected works in a 20-year career survey titled Hidden Messages, followed by Surreal Promenade e, another survey solo in 2019 at the Russian Museum of Art in Minnesota.

ON HIS WORK

Often called an erotic Surrealist for his daring representations of sexuality, relationships, and human encounter, Isupov takes narrative subject matter and merges it with ceramic sculptural form. Drawing on personal experience, and human observation, he creates works that integrate autobiography with universal narrative.

He states, “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.”

While the robust, and racially distinct facial traits make each sculpture unique, they also make the body of work capable of representing universal experiences. The bold color palette, heavily tattooed faces, and textured surfaces relate these works to the aesthetics of traditional Russian art, as well as to contemporary styles of illustration.

“My work portrays characters placed in situations that are drawn from my imagination but based on my life experiences.  My art works capture a composite of fleeting moments, hand gestures, eye movements that follow and reveal the sentiments expressed.  These details are all derived from actual observations but are gathered or collected over my lifetime.  Through the drawn images and sculpted forms, I capture faces, body types and use symbolic elements to compose, in the same way as you might create a collage.  These ideas drift and migrate throughout my work without direct regard to specific individuals, chronology or geography.  Universalism is implied and personal interpretation expected.   Through my work I get to report about and explore human encounters, comment on the relationships between man and woman, and eventually their sexual union that leads to the final outcome – the passing on of DNA which is the ultimate collection – a combined set of genes and a new life, represented in the child.”

ANDROGYNY SERIES


HEADS & BUSTS

The Androgyny series of heads and busts, often with surrealistic features and complex facial expressions, was first presented by Ferrin Gallery in 2008 (Pittsfield, MA Location). The works and show traveled to Mesa Contemporary Arts Center (Mesa, AZ) and the Daum Museum of Art (Sedalia, MO) in 2009, and select pieces remain in the artist’s archive for use in contemporary installations as well as available for collections and client acquisitions. 

2009 | “Androgyny: New Work by Sergei Isupov”, Daum Museum of Contemporary Art, Sedalia, MO, October 3 – December 6, 2009

2009 | “Androgyny”, Mesa Contemporary Arts Center, Mesa, AZ, April 10 – August 2, 2009

2008 | “Androgyny, The Preview, Solo Exhibition: Sculpture, Painting, Drawing”; Ferrin Gallery, Pittsfield, MA

FIGURATIVE WORKS


“Art is a life style for me.  Everything that surrounds and excites me is automatically processed and transformed into the final result: an artwork.  It is fascinating to watch the transitions from life to art. The essence of my work is not in the medium or the creative process, but the in 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.

I find ceramic to be the most versatile material and it is well suited to the expression of my ideas.   I consider sculpture to be a canvas for my paintings. All plastic, graphic and painting elements of the piece function as complementary parts of the work.

In this series of two-legged figures, Statuettes, the form is classical but the characters are comical.  I like the contrast of serious to humorous – the front is cartoon like but the back of each figure features an intimate painting of the being’s spirit.  

While each one expresses an individual personality or character, as a group, they become a population, inhabitants of my imaginary world or visitors from my imagination.”

HUMANIMAL SERIES


Humanimals, transform anthropomorphic sculptures that explore human relationships by blending the expression and gesture of the combined species.

A sculptural surrealist, Isupov first created works in the Humanimal Series around 2011, with a set of “standing figures” (animal/human hybrids) and “riders” (animal figures on animal/human hybrids)

In 2015 Isupov returned to his iconic form of the Humanimal, a series of standing oversized figurines. New groups and works emerge as the artist delves into the right form for each of his concepts. Close Your Eyes Open Your Eyes, Burden II, Butterfly Catcher, Life’s Work, and Strong hail from multiple eras in the artist’s exploration of the series.

“The animal faces and features represent the beast or natural animal instincts that are often in conflict with reason and intellect.

The hand represents the hand of a human or god – both a comforting support for humanity and a force of opposition or challenge to animal instincts.

The two sculptures explore these ideas of opposing forces of nature and humanity, man and beast, integral and constant throughout life.  There is nothing literal intended in the choice of imagery or narrative.  The images and expressions are of male/female/animal – symbolic, metaphoric, and intended to provide for individual interpretation. ”

FEATURED & PAST EXHIBITIONS

50 Years in the Making: Alumni Exhibition at The Clay Studio, June 13th – September 1st, 2024, featuring Sergei Isupov, Paul Scott, and Lauren Mabry

50 Years in the Making – Alumni Exhibition

2024 | Group Exhibition at The Clay Studio | Philadelphia, PA

featuring work by Paul Scott, Sergei Isupov, and Lauren Mabry

June 13th through Sep 1st, 2024

This Alumni Exhibition showcases artwork to reflect the current practice of the This Alumni Exhibition showcases artwork to reflect the current practice of the over 150 artist who have participated in The Clay Studio’s Resident Artist Program, Guest Artist Program, and Associate Artist Program over the 50 years since its founding.

View the exhibition page HERE

Kadri Pärnamets, "Fragments of Waves", 2024, porcelain, slip, glaze

Kadri Pärnamets, “Fragments of Waves”, 2024, porcelain, slip, glaze

Sergei Isupov & Kadri Pärnamets in CLAYTOPIA Summer Festival | Guldagergaard, Skælskør, Denmark

2024 | Group Exhibition at Claytopia at Guldagergaard | Skælskør, Denmark

featuring work by Sergei Isupov & Kadri Pärnamets

July 10th through August 10th, 2024

Claytopia is Guldagergaard’s initiative geared towards engaging the public, offering a unique space within the beautiful park surrounding Guldagergaard.

Among Claytopia’s activities are outdoor art exhibitions, concerts, discussion salons, and a design boutique.

View the exhibition page HERE

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

ALLIANCES


Thorne-Sagendorph Art Gallery

Keene State College | Keene, NH

Oct. 25 – Dec. 9, 2023

Reception November 18, 3-5 pm

The Artist’s 22nd Solo Exhibition

Featuring Artworks from the Artist’s Archive
& New Productions from The Studio

Installation Title Wall, featuring the artist's tools and drawings from Sergei Isupov's "Lips, Eyes, Ears, Eyebrows" and works in progress drawing series. Photo by John Polak Photography. "SERGEI ISUPOV: Alliances", Exhibition Installation at Thorne-Sagendorph Art Gallery, Keene State College, Keene, NH, October 25-December 6, 2023.

Installation Title Wall, featuring the artist’s tools and drawings from Sergei Isupov’s “Lips, Eyes, Ears, Eyebrows” and works in progress drawing series. Sculptures include “Crazy”, “Duel” (2006), and “Midnight Son” (2009). Photo by John Polak Photography. “SERGEI ISUPOV: Alliances”, Exhibition Installation at Thorne-Sagendorph Art Gallery, Keene State College, Keene, NH, October 25-December 6, 2023.

Sergei Isupov, "Ancestor", 2023, oil ink print on paper, 98 x 98". Photo by John Polak Photography.

Sergei Isupov, “Ancestor”, 2023, oil ink print on paper, 98 x 98″. Photo by John Polak Photography.

Sergei Isupov, "Heritage", 2023, stoneware, stain, glaze, 32 x 29 x 16". Photo by John Polak Photography.

Sergei Isupov, “Heritage”, 2023, stoneware, stain, glaze, 32 x 29 x 16″. Photo by John Polak Photography.

Sergei Isupov, "Lips, Eyes, Ear, Eyebrows", 2023, carving on plywood, ceramic, oil ink, 96 x 96". Photo by John Polak Photography.

Sergei Isupov, “Lips, Eyes, Ear, Eyebrows”, 2023, carving on plywood, ceramic, oil ink, 96 x 96″. Photo by John Polak Photography.


Ferrin Contemporary | July 15 – September 2, 2023

Sergei Isupov, "Pupeteer", 2023, porcelain, underglaze, glaze, 18.5 x 8 x 7".

Sergei Isupov, “Pupeteer”, 2023, porcelain, underglaze, glaze, 18.5 x 8 x 7″.

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

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

Sergei Isupov, "Game Changer", 2023, porcelain, underglaze, glaze, 17.5 x 8 x 6.5".

Sergei Isupov, “Game Changer”, 2023, porcelain, underglaze, glaze, 17.5 x 8 x 6.5″.

Isupov and Ferrin Contemporary have had exhibitions internationally since 1996, including key exhibitions and monumental installations that display various themes and series, which Isupov builds upon and pulls from to compose new environments and show content.

Isupov’s exhibitions include works in porcelain and mixed-media drawings produced at Project Art in Cummington, MA. 

PAST & PRESENT

2022 Solo Exhibition | Ferrin Contemporary | North Adams, MA

CURRENT + RECENT EXHIBITIONS

WORKSHOPS

We are pleased to be launching a new series of digital workshops
through Project Art 01026.com, with Sergei Isupov.

Workshop dates and more information can be found on

NEWS & FEATURES

Sergei Isupov: ALLIANCES Exhibition Catalog

Sergei Isupov: ALLIANCES Exhibition Catalog

Buy now

 

$5.00

DESCRIPTION

  • Catalog release: December 1, 2023.
  • 15-page, full-color catalog
  • Installation Images & Artwork Highlights, All images by John Polak Photography
  • Exhibition Essay by Leslie Ferrin, Show Statements & Editorial by Ferrin Contemporary
  • Copyright© 2023 and published by Thorne-Sagendorph Gallery, Keene State College, Keene, NH
  • Design by Erica Pritchett.

Special thanks to co-curators, Paul McMullan, professor at Keene State College and Leslie Ferrin, director, Ferrin Contemporary and for editorial support by Alexandra Jelleberg, associate director, Ferrin Contemporary.

Isupov’s artworks form alliances with one another as they move between media, explore scale, and are presented in curated exhibitions. Recent opportunities to create public works like his fire sculpture production and performances, along with solo exhibitions that show the full scope of Isupov’s creative versatility and process, have led to new works on paper, prints and wall installations combining ceramics with other materials.

FREE ON ISSUU

DESCRIPTION:

    • Catalog release: November 1, 2022.
    • 26-page, full-color catalog
    • Installation Images & Artwork Highlights
    • Exhibition Release, Show Statements, & Artist Bio-CV

Ferrin Contemporary is proud to present new works from internationally renowned sculptor Sergei Isupov. Sergei Isupov: PAST & PRESENT features new ceramic sculptures presented with both a multi-dimensional, mixed-media wall installation and independent pedestal-based works. Isupov and Ferrin Contemporary have been working together and presenting exhibitions internationally since 1996 and this will be the artist’s third solo show in our North Adams gallery location.

Collection Focus: Sergei Isupov at RAM

Collection Focus: Sergei Isupov at RAM

Buy now

 

Collection Focus: Sergei Isupov at RAM

$5.00

DESCRIPTION:

  • Published in 2014 by Racine Art Museum, Racine, WI
  • Essays and images explore the artist and his place at RAM and in the larger universe of art.
  • Captured Imagination: The Enigma of Sergei Isupov by Anthony Stellaccio
  • Collection Focus: Sergei Isupov at RAM by Lena Vigna
  • A Conversation between Leslie Ferrin and Bruce W. Pepich about Sergei Isupov

28-page, full-color exhibition catalog

SERGEI ISUPOV: ALLIANCES Exhibition Catalog

PURCHASE THE CATALOG HERE SERGEI ISUPOV: ALLIANCES Exhibition Catalog Thorne/Sagendorph Art Gallery Ferrin Contemporary is proud to present new works from internationally renowned sculptor Sergei Isupov. SERGEI ISUPOV: ALLIANCES Isupov's artworks form alliances with one another as they move between media, explore scale, and are presented in curated exhibitions. Recent opportunities to create public worksContinue reading →

The Clay Studio: Figuring Space Exhibition Catalog

Figuring Space Exhibition Catalog The Clay Studio: Figuring Space Publication Date: January 2023. This catalog features highlights on the artists in the exhibition and includes commentary by Jennifer Zwilling, Curator & Director of Artistic Programs at TCS, and Dr. Kelli Morgan, who are working together to make Figuring Space relevant to our audiences and the art historicalContinue reading →

Mastering Sculpture: The Figure in Clay

Mastering Sculpture: The Figure in Clay Explore the human form in-depth, from concept sketches and armatures to detailed instructions for constructing legs, torso, arms, hands, and head from clay. In Mastering Sculpture: The Figure in Clay, renowned sculptor and instructor Cristina Córdova teaches everything you need to know to replicate the full human figure usingContinue reading →

Sergei Isupov: PAST & PRESENT Exhibition Catalog

Sergei Isupov: PAST & PRESENT Exhibition Catalog Ferrin Contemporary is proud to present new works from internationally renowned sculptor Sergei Isupov. Sergei Isupov: PAST & PRESENT features new ceramic sculptures presented with both a multi-dimensional, mixed-media wall installation and independent pedestal-based works. Isupov and Ferrin Contemporary have been working together and presenting exhibitions internationally sinceContinue reading →

About Face: Contemporary Ceramic Scultpure Catalog

About Face: Contemporary Ceramic Sculpture About Face: Contemporary Ceramic Sculpture   This catalog features a foreword by Director Angie Dodson and two essays: one by Glenn Adamson, an expert in craft, ceramic, and contemporary art, and one by MMFA Curator of Art Jennifer Jankauskas, Ph.D. The exhibition catalog also includes color photography of select works inContinue reading →

RAM COLLECTION FOCUS: Sergei Isupov

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION February 23 - June 8, 2014 Racine Art Museum, Racine, WI A mid-career retrospective for an innovative artist who has pushed the possibilities of clay by combining two-dimensional narrative with three-dimensional ceramic form. Isupov explores the human condition. His vocabulary includes human beings and animals, gender, identity, and relationship issues, autobiography, artContinue reading →

EXPOSED: Heads, Busts, and Nudes figural ceramic sculpture from 1970 to the present

EXPOSED: Heads, Busts, and Nudes figural ceramic sculpture from 1970 to the present Work by 25 contemporary artists “working in clay and for whom the figure has been a rich and enduring motif.” Catalog includes work from the exhibit at Ferrin Contemporary as well as pieces available from private collections and artist studios. Introduction byContinue reading →

Sergei Isupov: 1996-2006

Sergei Isupov, "Ring of Fire", 2004, porcelain, 20 x 10 x 8". Sergei Isupov: 1996-2006 Published in 2006 by Ferrin Gallery, Lenox, MA This visual survey marks the tenth anniversary of the working relationship between the artist and Ferrin Gallery. Features works from 1996–2006 with short biographical essay and curriculum vitae. Sergei Isupov Catalog 1996-2006Continue reading →

Sergei Isupov: Androgyny

Sergei Isupov, "Say Nothing", 2008, stoneware, stain, glaze, 33 x 16 x 11". Sergei Isupov: Androgyny Published in 2009 by Mesa Contemporary Arts Center, Mesa AZ • Essay by Sonya Bekkerman, Senior Vice President, Russian Art, Sotheby’s • Introduction by Patty Haberman, Curator, Mesa Contemporary Arts • Project Summary by Leslie Ferrin, Director, Ferrin GalleryContinue reading →

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

LEONARDO QUILES

LEONARDO QUILES

OUR AMERICA/WHOSE AMERICA?

2022 | Ferrin Contemporary | North Adams, MA

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


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”


Our America/Whose America? asks, how are we redefining power structures? Who is retelling history, and through what lens?

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.