Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Kirsten Stingle: ceramics and found objects

Kirsten Stingle’s use of a bundt pan drew me in, the pan now a skirt for her ceramic torsos. Maybe the whimsy made me look, but it is Stingle’s ability to tell a story through the sculptural details that held my interest. She mixes ceramics and found objects to create narrative figures, drawing on her background in theater to help the stories unfold.

Kirsten Stingle ceramics and objects

In Renewal, pictured above, a young woman is holding an empty bird’s nest above her found-object skirt. Is the look on her face sadness, contemplation, or could it be something else? Look closely and you will see two baby birds resting on the back of her skirt. A nice reminder that Spring, a time of renewal and rebirth, has arrived. Perhaps her expression is one of quiet joy.

Kirsten Stingle ceramics

Kirsten Stingle: ceramics and found objects

Her background in the dramatic arts led her to want to express common threads of the human experience. Stingle was working in the field of welfare policy in New York City when the events of 9/11 happened, which led to a shift back to her creative roots. Says Kirsten, “More than ever I wanted to break down barriers and expose the common threads of humanity through storytelling. This time, however, I turned to ceramic sculpture as a vehicle for my narrative impulses.

~From an article in Multi-Tasking Woman

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Functional Pottery Animals

Functional Pottery Dragons

These pottery dragons were created by Christy Crews Dunn.
Christy creates pottery of almost any kind of animal you can imagine. All animals not only are beautiful, but also practical. If you haven't noticed, one of them is a lamp, and the other is a teapot! They are all individual and unique.

Functional Pottery Animals by Christy Crews Dunn

Christy Crews Dunn-2
Christy Crews Dunn

Friday, November 21, 2008

The clothing from ceramic shards

Li Xiaofeng is Beijing artist


Porcelain fragments from the Ming and Qing dynasties

Li Xiaofeng is Beijing artist who creates clothing piece made from traditional chinese ceramics.
He makes the clothing from ceramic shards coming from the song, ming,yuan and qing dynasties, which are sewn together on a leather undergarment. Some of his projects include a suit jacket and tie as well as a number of mid-length women’s dresses. In Xiaofeng’s studio, piles of ceramic pieces sit in bins sorted by date, colour and shape. ‘save as: contemporary chinese art born of ancient traditions’ currently running at the Virginia Miller Gallery is his exhibition debut outside of Asia.

virginiamiller.com