Project Type: EXHIBITION

Chris Antemann: An Occasional Craving

Chris Antemann: An Occasional Craving

Chris Antemann: An Occasional Craving


Dixon Gallery & Gardens
4339 Park Ave
Memphis, TN

February 19 ā€“ April 6, 2025

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


In 2011, American ceramic artist Chris Antemann formed what would become a fruitful partnership with the centuries-old Meissen porcelain manufactory that continues today. With a profound respect for the innovation and artistry of Meissen porcelain, Antemann re-envisions the concept of porcelain figural groupings with a wink of her twenty-first-century eye. Chrisā€™ colorful, imaginative, and often cheeky ceramic sculptures parody the dynamics between men and women, much as they did in the eighteenth century. And while viewers of rococo porcelain figural groupings would have been cognizant of the coded innuendos that abound in the art of that era, Antemann is much more explicit in her representations (and parodies) of human sexuality.

Chris Antemann: An Occasional CravingĀ presents a variety of Antemannā€™s works, from her tabletop-size early Meissen collaborations to more complex dramatic centerpieces. Inspired by the Dixonā€™s own Warda Stevens Stout Collection of Eighteenth-Century German Porcelain, by the vitality of our beautiful gardens, and by the Berthe Morisot painting in our collection,Ā Peasant Girl among Tulips, Antemann is creating a pair ofĀ tulipieresĀ specifically for the Dixon Gallery and Gardens. Visitors to the exhibition will be charmed by her sculptures, which walk a fine line between lighthearted and profound, and come away with a deeper understanding of the nuances of historic German porcelain.

ABOUT CHRIS ANTEMANN


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

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

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

SERGEI ISUPOV: Ancestor

SERGEI ISUPOV: Ancestor

Anderson Gallery

Bridgewater State University

40 School Street
Bridgewater, MA

November 1 through February 18, 2025

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


Sergei Isupov presents Ancestor, a dramatic solo exhibition featuring masterworks of figural sculpture at Anderson Gallery at Bridgewater State University. The installation creates a dialog between Isupovā€™s large busts and figural sculptures along with a web of narratives woven through the workā€™s illustrated surfaces.

Invited by Jay Block, associate director of collections and exhibitions at Bridgewater, Isupov embraced the opportunity to be an artist-curator and fill Anderson Gallery with selected works from 2008 to the present. A brilliant colorist, Sergei elected to paint the walls a deep red-orange, offsetting and highlighting the fully illustrated ceramic sculptures. Isupovā€™s large-scale busts from his Androgyny series and hybrid figures from his Humanimals series are placed in engaging dialogs with one another, inviting viewers to reflect on the ancestral narratives within the works and through their own family history.Ā 

ā€œSergei Isupov’s solo exhibition explores ancestral memories that are packed within narratives drawn from traditional myths, tales and legends. The stories are veiled, cautionary warnings of those mysterious things that go bump in the night, deeply woven and textural, fascinating in appearance and bristling sharp in meaning.ā€ ā€“ Jay Block

Isupovā€™s Ancestor unites a collection of figural sculpture that shows the evolution of ideas in his work. As expressed in the characters he portrays, the sculpturesā€™ interacting eyes and gestures activate relationships that are universal and timeless. Installed in a zig zag, this exhibition explores narratives from his past in dialog with the present, bridging memory and place in choreographed alignments.Ā 

ā€œRegardless of our backgrounds or wherever in the world we came to be, our shared experiences as humans are interwoven and passed on from generation to generation. The exhibition ANCESTOR allowed me to reflect on these works and my sources of inspiration and motivation ā€¦ When I think of myself and my works, Iā€™m not sure I create them, perhaps they create me.ā€ ā€“ Sergei Isupov

Born into a family of Russian artists during the USSR, Isupov spent his childhood in Kyiv, Ukraine, educated in Tallinn, Estonia, and now lives and works in Western Massachusetts.

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 Artsā€“Boston, Museum of Fine Artsā€“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 titledĀ Hidden Messages, followed byĀ Surreal PromenadeĀ e, another survey solo in 2019 at the Russian Museum of Art in Minnesota.

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

Stephen Bowers: A Conference of Birds

Stephen Bowers: A Conference of Birds

Stephen Bowers: A Conference of Birds


Lauraine Diggins Fine Art

Boonwurrung Country
5 Malakoff Street
North Caulfield VIC Australia 3161

October 26 ā€“ December 7, 2024

Featuring Stephen Bowers

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


This exhibition is full of vivid images portraying birds in colour-saturated settings where they overlap complex fragmentary backgrounds, many derived from engravings and textiles. The rich mash-ups of visual ideas on the backgrounds are playfully and skillfully rendered using meticulous brushstrokes often suggestive of those industrial process

EXHIBITION CATALOG & MEDIA


View the illustrated catalogue for Stephen Bowers: A Conference of Birds, including an essay by Leslie Ferrin.

“I live in a small rural town settled in the 1700ā€™s by English colonists on the land of the Indigenous people, the Norwottucks. Located at the Western end of Hampshire County in the foothills of the Berkshires, an area known as the Hilltowns, we are about 110 miles west of Boston and 180 miles North of New York City. As director of Ferrin Contemporary, from where I sit in my office, Australia is half a world away. Yet, as I look at images of works in this exhibition, I vividly recall my own residency and research in the place where these pieces have their genesis ā€“ Adelaide, South Australia.Ā 

The journey that brought me to Adelaide began in the summer of 2006, the year we established Project Art, a ceramic focused residency initiative located in an old historic river mill we had renovated on Main Street in Cummington, a small New England village. Stephen was well known to us through his exhibitions at art fairs, museums and galleries in the US ā€“ and he was one of the first guests at Project Art.”

ā€“Leslie Ferrin

Stephen Bowers discusses his ceramic artwork, the inspirations and methods of production. In this exhibition A Conference of Birds, Stephen has created a ‘flock’ of ceramic plates depicting birds derived from historical illustrations, which were often completed from museum specimens. A focus for Stephen in this exhibition was to achieve a background of even saturated colour, which is a difficult feat to achieve. Certain plates break up the colour through the use of patterning or feature a sunburst effect, similar to that found on guitars. The plates are further adorned with roundels of patterns, looking to designs by English artists William Morris, a major figure of the Arts and Crafts movement of the 19th century and William Kilburn, a leading designer of the 18th century. This use of patterning explores the notion of patterns-in-nature and nature-in-pattern and how we appropriate nature, as well as speaking to Stephen’s environmental concerns, the fragments reflecting the disconnection between humanity and the natural world.

ABOUT STEPHEN BOWERS


Stephen Bowers (b.1952, Sydney, lives and works in in Norwood, South Australia) is a self-taught artist working in ceramics- often focusing on strikingly decorative textiles, wallpapers, comic strips, natural history illustration found within the imagery of his childhood in the mid-1970ā€™s. Close observation of his often seemingly innocent decorations of cockatoos, kangaroos, and willow patterns, reveals subtexts of irony, commentary, and social observation, inviting viewers to look beyond the bravura of the surface to discover a complex and layered world.

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

LAUREN MABRY in Clocking In: 2024 Arts/Industry Residents

LAUREN MABRY in Clocking In: 2024 Arts/Industry Residents

December 14 ā€“ March 2, 2025

At the John Michael Kohler Arts Center
Sheboygan, WI

Featuring work by Lauren Mabry

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


FEATURED WORKS BY LAUREN MABRY

As part of the Arts Centerā€™s celebration of Arts/Industryā€™s fiftieth anniversary, the twelve artists in residence at the Kohler Co. factory during 2024 will exhibit their work in a yearlong group exhibition,Ā Clocking In: 2024 Arts/Industry Residents.

Since 1974, over five hundred artists have participated in the Arts Centerā€™s Arts/Industry residency. The program, operated in collaboration with Kohler Co., offers artists the time and space to focus on the creation of new work in the companyā€™s pottery and foundry studios, encouraging experimental art making on the factory floor and engagement with Kohler Co. associates.

The exhibition will present four residentsā€™ work at a time, in rotations of approximately four months each. Connections between the artists and their work will surface as the exhibition evolves, similar to the experience of a residency. Artists will show a range of workā€”some previously created, some newly commissioned for the exhibition, and some made during their residency.

Artists featured in the exhibition include first-time residents Shae Bishop, Justin Favela, Cathy Hsiao, Sahar Khoury, Lauren Mabry, and Ger Xiong/Ntxawg Xyooj.Ā Returning Arts/Industry alumni artists Sharif Bey, Mary Anne Kluth, Harold Mendez, Martha Poggioli, Lee Emma Running, and Edra Soto will also present work in the exhibition.

ABOUT LAUREN MABRY


American, b. 1985, Cincinnati, OH
lives and works in Philadelphia, PA

Lauren Mabry is recognized internationally for her bold, dynamic glazes and inventive use of material, color, and form. Her ceramic vessels, objects, and dimensional paintings embrace experimentation as a way to question the boundary between abstract painting, minimalist sculpture, and process art.

Mabry is the recipient of individual grants from the Pew Center for Arts & Heritage, the Independence Foundation, and the National Council on Education in the Ceramic ArtsĀ  Emerging Artist Award, and she has worked at the Jingdezhen International Studio in China and the Gaya Ceramic Art Center in Bali, Indonesia.

Mabry has shown in numerous institutions including the Bemis Center for Contemporary Art, (Omaha, NE), Fuller Craft Museum (Brockton, MA) and Milwaukee Art Museum, (Milwaukee, WI), and her work is included in the collections of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, (Kansas City, MO), Daum Museum of Contemporary Art, (Sedalia, MO), Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, (Overland Park, KS), and Sheldon Museum of Art, (Lincoln, NE).

In 2007, Mabry completed her BFA from Kansas City Art Institute, and she received her MFA from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 2012. Mabry is represented by Pentimenti, (Philadelphia, PA), and Ferrin Contemporary.

COURTNEY M. LEONARD in Shifting Shorelines: Art, Industry, and Ecology along the Hudson River

COURTNEY M. LEONARD in Shifting Shorelines: Art, Industry, and Ecology along the Hudson River

Shifting Shorelines: Art, Industry, and Ecology along the Hudson River


Wallach Art Gallery at Columbia University | New York, NY

October 5, 2024 – January 12, 2025

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


Shifting ShorelinesĀ brings together historic and contemporary art, visual culture, and environmental science to engage the history of human existence, commerce, and industry along the Hudson estuary. Focusing on the riverā€™s edges from Albany southward to its flow into the Atlantic Ocean, the exhibition foregrounds the impact of local industry on the natural environment, highlighting the history of the river’s distinctive ecological features such as brackish and salt marshes, mudflats, and beaches, along with the docks, factories, and buildings that crowded them out. Through visual and material evidence, Shifting Shorelines demonstrates the various cycles of exploitation, damage, and reclamation.

Shifting ShorelinesĀ actively engages in a critical dialogue with images of the river as a natural paradise by showing these seemingly hegemonic portrayals alongside contrasting representations that consider the exploitation and environmental damage to the river that has accompanied many of the human endeavors along its shores. In so doing it offers a counter reading of the received art historical narrativesā€”narratives overwhelmingly grounded on the work of white male artistsā€”that aims for a rich and complex understanding of the legacy, life, and livelihoods along the river informed by the voices and experiences of a broad range of creators.

The exhibition will be accompanied by a publication as well as academic and public programming.

ARTISTS IN THE EXHIBITION


Henry Ary ā€¢ Victor Gifford Audubon ā€¢ Alvin Baltrop ā€¢ Gifford Reynolds Beal ā€¢ Julie Hart Beers ā€¢ George Bellows ā€¢ Daniel Putnam Brinley ā€¢ Johann Hermann Carmienke ā€¢ Frederic Edwin Church ā€¢ Thomas Cole ā€¢ Glenn O. Coleman ā€¢ Samuel Colman ā€¢ Thomas Commeraw ā€¢ John V. Cornell ā€¢ Jasper F. Cropsey ā€¢ Henry Golden Dearth ā€¢ Aaron Douglas ā€¢ Joellyn Duesberry ā€¢ Ernest Fiene ā€¢ Kryn Frederycks ā€¢ Reva Fuhrman ā€¢ Emil Ganso ā€¢ Marie-FranƧois-RĆ©gis Gignoux ā€¢ Shi Guorui ā€¢ David Hammons ā€¢ Joost Hartgersz ā€¢ Palmer Hayden ā€¢ Edward Hopper ā€¢ Donna Hogerhuis ā€¢ Every Ocean Hughes ā€¢ William Henry Jackson ā€¢ Yvonne Jacquette ā€¢ David Johnson ā€¢ Abraham Leon Kroll ā€¢ Athena LaTocha ā€¢ Ernest Lawson ā€¢ An-My LĆŖ ā€¢ Courtney M. Leonard ā€¢ Marie Lorenz ā€¢ George Benjamin Luks ā€¢ John Marin ā€¢ Reginald Marsh ā€¢ Gordon Matta-Clark ā€¢ Alex Matthew ā€¢ Alan Michelson ā€¢ Charles Frederick William Mielatz ā€¢ Jacques Gerard Milbert ā€¢ Thomas Moran ā€¢ William H. Moschett ā€¢ Ruth Orkin ā€¢ Anthony Papa ā€¢ Lisa Sanditz ā€¢ Henry Schnakenberg ā€¢ Jean-Marc Superville Sovak ā€¢ Alfred Stieglitz ā€¢ Joseph Vollmering ā€¢ John Ferguson Weir ā€¢ Worthington Whittredge

ABOUT COURTNEY M. LEONARD


Courtney Leonard Artist Portrait

Courtney M. Leonard is an artist and filmmaker, who has contributed to the Offshore Art movement. Leonardā€™s current work embodies the multiple definitions of ā€œbreachā€, an exploration and documentation of historical ties to water, whale and material sustainability.

In collaboration with national and international museums, cultural institutions, and indigenous communities in North America, New Zealand, Nova Scotia, and the United States Embassies, Leonardā€™s practice investigates narratives of cultural viability as a reflection of environmental record.

PAUL SCOTT in Hudson River Valley: Echoes

PAUL SCOTT in Hudson River Valley: Echoes

Gamble Family Gallery

Dunedin Fine Art Center
Dunedin, FL

September 13 – December 23, 2024

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


Group exhibition of artists and experiences encountered in Dunedin’s October 2022 travels to the Hudson River Valley hosted by DFACā€™s beloved auxiliary, the Sterling Society.

English, b. 1953,Ā Darley Dale, Derbyshire, England
lives and works in Cumbria, UK

Paul Scott is a Cumbrian-based artist with a diverse practice and an international reputation. Creating individual pieces that blur the boundaries between fine art, craft and design, he is well known for research into printed vitreous surfaces, as well as his characteristic blue and white artworks in glazed ceramic.

Scottā€™s artworks can be found in public collections around the globe ā€“ including The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design Norway, the Victoria and Albert Museum London, National Museums Liverpool, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh and Brooklyn Art Museum USA. Commissioned work can be found in a number of UK museums as well as public places in the North of England, including Carlisle, Maryport, Gateshead and Newcastle Upon Tyne. He has also completed large-scale works in Hanoi, Vietnam and GuldagergĆ„rd public sculpture park in Denmark.

A combination of rigorous research, studio practice, curation, writing and commissioned work ensures that his work is continually developing. It is fundamentally concerned with the re-animation of familiar objects, landscape, pattern and a sense of place. He was Professor of Ceramics at Oslo National Academy of the Arts (KHiO) from 2011ā€“2018. Scott received his Bachelors of Art Education and Design at Saint Martinā€™s College and Ph.d at the Manchester Institute for Research and Innovation in Art and Design in Manchester, England.

His current research project New American Scenery has been enabled by an Alturas Foundation artist award, Ferrin Contemporary, and funding from Arts Council England. More on New American Scenery,Ā 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

ON VIEW | Ferrin Contemporary at Project Art

ON VIEW | Ferrin Contemporary at Project Art

Ferrin Contemporary exhibits artwork from represented artists and collections in the galleries at Project Art in Cummington, MA. View artists’ most recent works, installations from recent traveling exhibitions, and objects and artworks from artist archives and Ferrin Contemporary’s historic collection.

OUR INSTALLATION SPACES


THE SUMMER GALLERY

Ferrin Contemporary’s Summer Gallery is situated on the south end of Project Art and hosts curated exhibitions in a more traditional white-box setting.

Now on view in the Summer Gallery:

ALWAYS ON VIEW

The gallery provides a more domestic, residential setting to view artworks. Works are displayed on both pedestals and period furniture, alongside a sitting area where visitors can peruse a selection of artist and our library of books and catalogs.

Now on view:

The Studios at Project Art exhibits small works by resident artists.

Now on view in the Studio:

Cristina CĆ³rdova in EL PUENTE

Cristina CĆ³rdova in EL PUENTE

John & Robyn Horn Gallery

At Penland School of Craft

Penland, NC

April 1 – June 7, 2025

Featuring work by Cristina CĆ³rdova

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


A metaphorical bridge,Ā El Puente, exists between Puerto Rico and the US, which share a complex and often misunderstood political and cultural relationship. How do we expressĀ El PuenteĀ through the lens of Puerto Rican artists?

This exhibition centers on legacy and culture, focusing on multi-generational artists in dialogue with the US through their education, residencies, and career opportunities. Co-curator Cristina CĆ³rdova characterizes this phenomenon as a continuous loop of communal encounters and mutual influence, followed by a momentary respite in which the encounters are assimilated and transformed within the artistic community. This pattern has taken place over many years and generations, moving back and forth between two territories inextricably connected yet distinctly separate, sometimes with intention and at times unconsciously. What are the influences of this bridge on the insular art community in Puerto Rico and how do the experiences evolve in the vacuum of an underresourced arts community?

Through the lens of Puerto Rican artists who have cultivated long- and short-term connections with the US throughout their formative and professional trajectories,Ā El PuenteĀ offers insights into how these connections shape and inform the artistic practices, perspectives, and creative trajectories of Puerto Rican artists and consequently feed into the broader landscape of contemporary American craft in an evolving and continuous dynamic.

Participating artists: Cristina CĆ³rdova, Ada del Pilar Ortiz, Luis Gabriel Sanabria, and Jaime SuĆ”rez

ABOUT CRISTINA CƓRDOVA


Puerto Rican, b. 1976, Boston, MA
lives and works in Penland, NC

Native to Puerto Rico, Cristina CĆ³rdova creates figurative compositions that explore the boundary between the materiality of an object and our involuntary dialogues with the self-referential. Images captured through the lens of a Latin American upbringing question socio-cultural notions of gender, race, beauty, and power.Ā  CĆ³rdova has received numerous grants including the North Carolina Arts Council Fellowship Grant, a Virginia Groot Foundation Recognition Grant, several International Association of Art Critics of Puerto Rico awards, and a prestigious United States Artist Fellowship award in 2015.

CĆ³rdova has had solo exhibitions at the Alfred Ceramic Art Museum, (Alfred, NY), and her work is included in the collections of the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, (Washington, DC), ColecciĆ³n Acosta de San Juan Puerto Rico, (San Juan, PR), the Mint Museum of Craft + Design, (Charlotte, NC), and Museum of Contemporary Art, (San Juan, PR). In 1998, CĆ³rdova completed her BA at the University of Puerto Rico, and she received her MFA from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 2002. CĆ³rdova is represented by Ferrin Contemporary.

Jacqueline Bishop: THE KEEPER OF ALL THE SECRETS

Jacqueline Bishop: THE KEEPER OF ALL THE SECRETS

August 23 through November 3, 2024

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION


As part of our public programmeĀ Time, Space and EmpireĀ ā€“ a multi-site, cross-arts programme of artist commissions, installations, talks and films that explore the imperial history of Stoke-on-Trent and Maritime Greenwich World Heritage Site ā€“ Culture& is working with the V&A Wedgwood Collection on a display of ceramic works by contemporary artist Jacqueline Bishop. The artwork is a 13-piece porcelain table service calledĀ TheĀ Keeper of All the SecretsĀ based on a well-known Caribbean image, theĀ Market Woman. It combines historic botanical illustration and depictions of enslaved West Africans and Indigenous people.

ABOUT TIME, SPACE AND EMPIRE

Culture& is excited to launch Time, Space and EmpireĀ (2024-2025), a multi-site, cross-arts programme exploring the concepts of time, space, and the development of Britainā€™s sea power during the expansion of its former empire in relation to the Maritime Greenwich World Heritage Site in Southeast London and the Potteries in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire.

Programmes include artist interventions in heritage sites, working with community-led organisations to empower underrepresented audiences, and creating research opportunities for diverse talents. The project will also explore how the colonial economy brought changes to what was consumed and considered to be ā€˜good tasteā€™.

FEATURED ARTWORK


Jacqueline Bishop
The Keeper of All The Secrets (Edition of 3)
2024
digital print on porcelain, gold lustre
12.5″

PROGRAMMING


Museum Late: Time, Space and Empire
A Long Table on Sugar, Tea, Plants and Pottery

Friday, August 23 | 6 – 8pm

BOOK YOUR FREE TICKET

Jacqueline Bishop: Fauna Poetry Reading

Saturday, August 24 | 1 – 2pm

BOOK YOUR FREE TICKET

Long Table on Sugar, Tea, Plants, and Pottery

Saturday, August 24 | 3 – 4pm

BOOK YOUR FREE TICKET

CRISTINA CƓRDOVA: EVA XV

CRISTINA CƓRDOVA: 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 22ā€³

EVA XV

RECENTLY ON VIEW

Cristina CĆ³rdova, “EVA XV”, on view in the Spanish Colonial Gallery at the Figge Art Museum, Davenport, Iowa, 2024

2024 | Installation at the Figge Art Museum,Ā 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 ā€“ April 21, 2024

Our America/Whose America? is a ā€œcall and responseā€ 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 CoĢrdova, 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 CoĢrdova, 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?Ā is a celebration of Ferrin Contemporaryā€™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 CoĢrdova, “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 CĆ³rdova, 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 CĆ³rdova 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 ā€œde monte y marā€ ( ā€œfrom mountain and seaā€ ) 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.