Kadri Pärnamets Exhibitions

Kadri Pärnamets: Muraka at Ferrin Contemporary, Cummington, MA

Kadri Pärnamets: Muraka at Ferrin Contemporary, Cummington, MA

Ceramics Now, September 23, 2025

Kadri Pärnamets: Muraka is on view at Ferrin Contemporary, Cummington, MA

September 20 – November 15, 2025

Ferrin Contemporary is proud to present Kadri Pärnamets: Muraka, a new exhibition by one of Project Art’s resident artists. The exhibition features porcelain sculptures reflecting on the universal element of water and natural forms, and opened during Riverfest and Project Art’s Open House on September 20th.

The exhibition builds on two bodies of work Kadri Pärnamets: Choreography of Water at Ferrin Contemporary her 2022 solo show at Ferrin Contemporary in North Adams, Massachusetts as well as her design for her first site responsive public art commission Fire Sculpture at Claytopia at Guldagergaard in Skælskør, Denmark. The works in Muraka continue themes of abstract biomorphic forms inspired by water, air, and the changing environment of the river ecosystem. Pärnamets uses water as a metaphor; her multicolored surfaces and organic forms visually reference water’s vast, expansive body that connects land and sky and its forces that impact both protect and threaten the land, earth’s inhabitants and possibly humanity itself.

Ferrin Contemporary director Leslie Ferrin comments “Kadri’s grounding in her own environments in both Estonia and Cummington provides a deep foundation for her quiet, soft forms and surfaces. Straddling two worlds, her daily walks provide inspiration and the time for reflection as she watches the colors change and considers the impact on nature from the turbulent forces pulling us forward.”

Pärnamets chose the title for her exhibition Muraka, naming it after a place with special meaning for her in Estonia. Muraka is a nature reserve in her home country characterised by its wetlands, unspoilt forest and one of few remaining wilderness areas in north-east Estonia.

Kadri Pärnamets: Muraka includes her first large scale porcelain sculptures produced in 2025 with support from the A.R.T. 2025 grant from Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation. The funding provided time and materials to expand on two series 2024 that are included in the exhibition – Fragments of Waves and Frame of Mind series’. These pieces differ in form and scale while tracing a clear flow of consciousness from her past works. Works are placed in rows like thoughts drifting to the surface, contained in their individualism, but connected as part of a wider sea or ecosystem. Her surface treatments, which alternate between matte respites and shimmering, effervescent blue glaze, speak not only to the glimmer of sun on water, but to the changing environment back home in Massachusetts. Residing along the Westfield River, Pärnamets works amongst an everpresent soundtrack of the river’s current and the hush of waving willow trees. In the studio and on her daily walks through the neighborhood, she is always observing, listening, and finding inspiration in the acute timbres and textures of the changing New England seasons.

Pärnamets’ work has been shown internationally at the Estonian Museum of Applied Art and Design (Tallinn, Estonia), at the International Tea Trade Expo (Shanghai, China), at Guldagergaard in Skælskør, Denmark, and many others. Since 1996, she has participated in symposiums in Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Switzerland, USA, Norway, and Hungary. She graduated from the Art Institute of Tallinn, Estonia with a BA/MFA in Ceramics. Dividing her time between Estonia and the USA, her primary studio is the USA at Project Art in Cummington, MA. She is represented by Ferrin Contemporary.

Contact
info@ferrincontemporary.com

Ferrin Contemporary at Project Art
54 Main Street
Cummington, MA 01026
United States

Photos by John Polak Photography

More on the Exhibition HERE

More on Kadri Pärnamets HERE

Posted by Isabel Twanmo in Artist News, Events, Exhibition, News
At Ferrin Contemporary, cloud-like porcelain sculptures take shape in Kadri Pärnamets’ ‘Muraka’

At Ferrin Contemporary, cloud-like porcelain sculptures take shape in Kadri Pärnamets’ ‘Muraka’

By Jennifer Huberdeau, The Berkshire Eagle, September 18, 2025

CUMMINGTON — Porcelain curves, twists and grows, taking on unexpected billowy forms in Kadri Pärnamets’ new exhibition, “Muraka,” in Ferrin Contemporary’s summer gallery at Project Art.

“I find that most of my work is inspired by water lately,” Pärnamets, just back from a summer trip to her native Estonia, said in a recent interview at the gallery.

That inspiration comes from walks along the Westfield River, which flows behind Project Art, and in Estonia, as well as from the ocean during a residency at Guldagergaard International Ceramic Research Center in Denmark, where she created a 7-foot-tall fire sculpture for Claytopia in July 2024.

The show, which opens with a short talk and public reception, 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 20, as part of Project Art’s open house during the Cummington Cultural District’s RiverFest, runs through Nov. 15. Pärnamets and her husband, Sergi Isupov, both resident artists of Project Art, will also be hosting RAKU firing, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., on the banks of the Westfield River, as part of the community-wide celebration.

“Muraka,” named for an Estonian nature reserve filled with wetlands and forests, builds upon two previous bodies of work, “Choreography of Water,” a 2022 solo show at Ferrin Contemporary’s former North Adams gallery featuring a sea of hand-built porcelain cups, vases and cloud forms, and her 2024 works, “Fragments of Waves,” a series documenting the rise and fall of ocean waves made from layers of colored clay in a luscious variety of blues and green hues.

“The sea just surrounded me, and there were all these waves out there. I was looking for all these different ways to express my idea about all this rushing water. Whenever you look at it, it’s different,” Pärnamets said of her creation of “Fragments of Waves,” which is also on view at the gallery. “I was just thinking, what’s the meaning for me? What’s the meaning for most people?”

Building on that work, Pärnamets began sculpting a series of works — small bulbous sculptures in bright hues that are reminiscent of the cloudberries that grow in the bogs of Muraka, the nature reserve close to her home in Estonia. These works informed two large-scale works in the show, created with the assistance of an Artists Resource Trust (A.R.T.) Grant from the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation.

“Nature is a big inspiration,” Pärnamets said. “They start from this kind of cloud feeling. It’s something that you can’t touch, but it is there. You can see it. You can feel it, but you can’t really touch it.”

That feeling, she said, is what informs her work, allows her to shape soft, billowy, cloud-like structures from clay.

“It’s hard to explain,” she said. “It’s just this form that’s inspiring to me. I call it a softness and a movement. When you look at them, you can see this softness, this movement … like they’re floating a little bit.”

Jennifer Huberdeau is the features editor at The Berkshire Eagle. She can be reached at jhuberdeau@berkshireeagle.com or 413-496-6229.

More on the Exhibition HERE

More on Kadri Pärnamets HERE

Posted by Isabel Twanmo in Artist News, Events, Exhibition, News
Sergei Isupov & Kadri Pärnamets in CLAYTOPIA Summer Festival | Guldagergaard, SkÌlskør, Denmark

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

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.

Claytopia at Guldagergaard
Heilmannsvej 31 A
DK-4230 SkÌlskør, Denmark


More on the Exhibition HERE

More on Sergei Isupov HERE

More on Kadri Pärnamets HERE

Claytopia


At Guldagergaard | SkÌlskør, Denmark | July 10 through August 10, 2024

KADRI PÄRNAMETS FIRE SCULPTURE


In 2022, Kadri Pärnamets’ Choreography of Water was exhibited at Ferrin Contemporary in North Adams, MA. The solo exhibition cast the gallery in a sea of hand-built porcelain cups, vases, and cloud forms to explore earth’s most precious resource: water. In Summer 2024, Kadri Pärnamets returned to this idea of water through her newest and largest endeavor to date: a 7+ foot fire sculpture.

On July 9th, the fire sculpture was fired via a “petal kiln”– a stand-alone, reusable kiln designed to open like flower petals – fabricated by friend and master kiln-maker, Andres Allik. The monumental work was unveiled in its final form at Guldagergaard’s Summer festival, Claytopia. 

ABOUT THE FIRE SCULPTURE

Having displayed a fire sculpture made by Kadri’s husband, Sergei Isupov, years prior, the Claytopia team approached Kadri in 2023 to commission one of her own. Normally working in porcelain, slip, and glaze on smaller scales, this fire sculpture differs greatly from Kadri’s past works. The sculpture was built using stoneware clay, which includes higher amounts of grog (raw, crushed materials containing silica and alumina), resulting in a more rough, textured medium. As it fires, the clay shrinks more than 10%, and any glazes applied to the clay body will produce darker hues than if applied to porcelain. The changing and precarious nature of these materials adds numerous unpredictable factors, which are only disclosed upon removal from the kiln. These factors directly connect to the larger ideas behind Kadri’s past work: testing life’s constant, unpredictable ups and downs and how we move through and with them. 

EVENTS & PROGRAMMING


SERGEI ISUPOV: EXPLORING THE SCULPTED FIGURE AND THE PAINTED SURFACE

July 4-5, 2024

Join internationally acclaimed sculptor Sergei Isupov for a two day workshop exploring the sculpted figure in clay and the painted surface – from the development of ideas to the materialization of form.

The workshop combines demonstrations with hands-on active studio time and one-on-one instruction. Isupov will lead students through demonstrations and include techniques of slab construction, underglaze painting, and glaze application as the three-dimensional sculpture serves as a canvas for narrative painting.

The workshop runs from 10 am to 5 pm both days.

Day 1 – Demonstration of slab construction and preparation of painting surface using simple tools
10 am to 1 pm: Demonstration of slab construction
1 pm to 2 pm: Lunch
2 pm to 5 pm: Participants sculpt their own forms with Isupov’s help and consultations.

Day 2 – Demonstration of underglaze stain and glaze application with an emphasis on using fine brushes to create clean lines
10 am to 12 pm: Demonstration of surface preparation, use of tools and brushes for underglaze painting, discussion of development of narrative.
12 pm to 1 pm: Lunch
2 pm to 5 pm: Participants use these techniques on their own sculptures with Isupov’s consultation.

Language:
English

Price: 2950 DKK

Meals and Drinks:
Throughout the workshop days an electric kettle, coffee and fine teas are available at your disposal.
Meals are not included, but we are providing access to a fully equipped kitchen. It is also possible to order breakfasts and/or lunches before hand:

Breakfast bag: Organic bread from the local bakery, yogurt, cheese, jam and orange juice. Price: 85 DKK
Lunch pack: Fresh mixed salad and a serving of bread. Price: 85 DKK

Accommodation during the Workshop:
It is possible to rent a room at Guldagergaard for 300 DKK per night (when available)

Add on: Short-term Residency Option
Guldagergaard offers the possibility for Workshop participants to extend their Workshop stay with a one-week residency after the Workshop for additional price of 2500 DKK. This price includes access to studio facilities and accommodation for one week. It does not cover additional firings and materials.
To reserve a short-term residency, please send an e-mail to: mette@ceramic.dk.

REGISTER FOR THE WORKSHOP HERE

Posted by Isabel Twanmo in Artist News, Events, Exhibition, News
Sergei Isupov and Kadri Pärnamets in Small Favors 2024 at The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, PA

Sergei Isupov and Kadri Pärnamets in Small Favors 2024 at The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, PA

The 50th anniversary edition of Small Favors presents almost 500 small artworks displayed in 4-inch cubes. In the exhibition you will find big ideas, individuality, and material awareness. Some artists were invited, while others were selected from an applicant pool of over 1,000. To celebrate that this truly is an exhibition for everyone, the call was extended to artists using other media to create their art, including wood, metal, glass, fiber, paper, and paint. The majority of the works are examples of small ceramic artworks that range from tiny mugs to intricate sculptures. 

Artists represented in Small Favors range from the most established ceramic artists in the field, to young artists and students new to the material. Small Favors engages artists’ creativity in new and exciting ways with the challenge of making art on a very small scale. Some create works in their usual style, but at a reduced scale. Others use it as an opportunity to experiment and break away from what they create in their daily studio practice. 

This range of artists allows us to present works in a broad price range, from $35 to $4,500. We hope that this empowers people to become collectors, as well as helping established collectors continue to support artists.

More on the Exhibition HERE

More on Sergei Isupov HERE

More on Kadri Pärnamets HERE

Small Favors 2024


At The Clay Studio | Philadelphia, PA | April 11 – June 2, 2024

Posted by Isabel Twanmo in Artist News, Events, Exhibition, News
Sergei Isupov and Kadri Parnamets in Small Favors 2023 at The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, PA

Sergei Isupov and Kadri Parnamets in Small Favors 2023 at The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, PA

Artists represented in this 17th edition of Small Favors range from the most established ceramic artists in the field, to young artists new to the field. Small Favors engages artists’ creativity in new and exciting ways with the challenge of making pieces on a very small scale. For some artists, the work they create is similar to what they normally make, but at a reduced scale. Others use it as an opportunity to break away from what they create in their daily studio practice. There is an open call each year for juried work, as well as a group of invited artists who participate. This year includes artworks coming from Japan, China, and Budapest in addition to those from around the United States.

More on the Exhibition HERE

More on Sergei Isupov HERE

More on Kadri Pärnamets HERE

Small Favors 2023


At THE CLAY STUDIO | Philadelphia, PA | April 29 – Jul 2, 2022

PUBLIC EVENTS


PREVIEW RECEPTION


Friday, April 28th, 2023,  5pm – 8pm
Location: The Clay Studio
1425 N American Street
Philadelphia, PA 19122
Cost / Admission : Free

Preview the almost 400 small artworks ranging from ceramics to wood, metal, glass, fiber, paper, and paint.

Learn more about the Preview HERE.

Posted by AxelJ in Artist News, Events, Exhibition, News
Family Affair: Sergei Isupov, Kadri Pärnamets, and Roosi Isupov

Family Affair: Sergei Isupov, Kadri Pärnamets, and Roosi Isupov

FAMILY AFFAIR: Sergei Isupov, Kadri Pärnamets, and Roosi Isupov

April 25 through May 25, 2015
Independent Art Projects on the MASS MoCA campus in North Adams, MA

Family Affair features painted porcelain sculptures created by Sergei Isupov and Kadri Pärnamets and their daughter, Roosi Isupov. This collection of artwork was produced during their recent seven-month residence at Project Art in Cummington, MA.

Click here to view or download press release.

Posted by AxelJ in Press Releases