Ceramicists know how to deal with heartbreak — these are artists, after all, who make something they love and then willingly throw it into a fire. So while the I’m Revolting Ceramics Shop that I’ve curated for Sight Unseen OFFSITE — opening at noon this Friday at 200 Lafayette in Soho — is in many ways a survey of talented young people working today in clay, it’s also a small tribute to the beauty in unpredictability and letting go. Unlike painting or weaving or most other mediums, potters don’t get to see the thing complete in front of them as they work. They shape a piece of clay with their hands and then give it over to the heat of the universe. And though this sounds totally cheeseball, that might be why I love it so much — that every piece carries in it some accident. The range of work in the I’m Revolting Ceramics Shop is a reminder of this possibility in imperfection: our perpetual struggle to take the same stuff there has ever been – mud and fire, failure and ambition – and create of it something distinctly personal.
In this slideshow, I’ll be previewing a few of the amazing pieces that will be on sale in the I’m Revolting Ceramics Shop from May 16-20 as part of Sight Unseen OFFSITE. The full bonkers list of artists is: Julianne Ahn of Object and Totem, Dana Bechert, Laura Carlin, Jonathan Cross, Chie Fujii of ChieCo, Sally Hackett, Julia Haft-Candell, Lindsey Hampton, Jessica Hans, Natalie Herrera of High Gloss, Cody Hoyt, Juliana Hung of Jujumade, Jennie Jieun Lee, Matthias Kaiser, Andrew Kazakes, Katy Krantz, Helen Levi, Ian McDonald, Michael McDowell, Keiko Narahashi, Joanna Pike, Joseph Pintz, Takayuki Watanabe, Joey Watson, and Bari Ziperstein of BZIPPY & CO. If you’re in the area, please come and see them in person — and bring your wallet!
In between detailed recommendations for various anti-psychotics, a favorite professor once told me about a legendary ceramic bowl that had been made in a single motion. Basically, someone held a lump of clay in one hand and then punched it. That’s it. I’ve thought about that bowl a lot in the intervening years — the effort and refusal. I find myself being drawn repeatedly to echoes of that idea, including this work by Los Angeles-based potter Andrew Kazakes, who makes the same deceptively simple forms over and over again. They’re inspired by “waves crashing against the shore,” using glazes that respond to the vagaries of heat.
I first saw the work of Joey Watson through Weed-Craft, my favorite nighttime internet haunt, a tumblr of totally high ceramics work. Sometimes a single image can just shake you in a completely new direction, and force you to confront the easy reliances in your taste. These pieces by Watson, who lives in Kansas, were like that for me — the espresso cups have crystals and little balls and carabiners attached to them! Also, zig-zag straws! They are completely rad, deeply weird.
Bari Ziperstein just got married this weekend (congrats!), which has nothing to do with her vases for BZIPPY & CO, except to say that she is eminently loved and lovable, and a master of experimentation and surface texture.
Monica from Sight Unseen had an article in The New York Times a few weeks ago anointing four hot young ceramic artists, who were indeed all young and hot. So psyched that three of the four made work especially for the I’m Revolting Ceramics Shop: Dana Bechert (who made the meticulous hand-carved porcelain pourover sets above), Natalie Herrera of High Gloss and Lindsey Hampton.
Marbled rolled clay planter by Cody Hoyt.
Every ceramics studio has at least two sludge buckets — one for clay scraps and slip, and the other for glaze. Joanna Pike makes these soap dishes by scraping the bottom of the sludge and firing it. Her pieces are little primordial objects of failure and redemption, and sort of challenging, like all things that are worth it.
Ceramic doughbowls by Joseph Pintz have some major heft to them.
Ghost Flower Sculpture by Katy Krantz.
Lion figurine by illustrator Laura Carlin, a little exploration of what happens when two dimensions are dragged into three.
Like many of the artists in the show, I’d admired Matthias Kaiser’s work for a long time, looking for some excuse to contact him. Kaiser collects his own clay from tree roots near his studio in Germany; some of the pieces are glazed just as they are found, preserving the action of the hand pulling up material. He also has that great potter vibe, that simple unpretentious deepness. His idea of perfect happiness “exists only in blissful moments of forgetting the self;” his most treasured possession is “nice clay.”
Chances are that you know Mike McDowell from his archive of contemporary ceramics on Pinterest — as Mudpuppy, he has more than 1,000,000 followers. But his own work is great, too. There’s a real fleshy lumpiness to clay; I love how these vases are a little grotesque, like all the insides of the world made visible.
From the “Artifact” vase series by Julianne Ahn of Object and Totem.
If the mark of being a legend is that people tell unconfirmed stories about you, then Takayuki Watanabe is definitely it. He lives somewhere in rural Japan, wood fires his own pieces only twice a year, and maybe sells them on the street once in a while from a rolling cart?
See and shop the I’m Revolting Ceramics Shop at Sight Unseen OFFSITE, taking place in New York City’s Soho neighborhood from May 16 to 20, 2014, at 200 Lafayette Street. The event is free and open to the public during the hours of 12PM to 7PM on Friday, and 11AM to 7PM Saturday through Tuesday. For more information, please visit offsite.sightunseen.com.
When we first began following the inspiration blog mysteriously known as I'm Revolting, we knew we'd found a kindred spirit, at least aesthetically. (If you're even the slightest fan of our Pinterest, you should know that many of our posts originate with I'm Revolting's boards, or result from tumbling down the internet rabbit hole after reading one of her posts.) But it was only when we asked the Los Angeles–based blogger — whose real name is Su Wu — to pen one of our Q&A columns that we truly knew we'd stumbled upon one of our own: A former journalist who threw the contents of her interior world online after the publication for which she was writing folded, Wu is an image collector, a thinker, and a fantastic writer to boot. Today for Sight Unseen she interviews Brent Pearson, the artist behind a heavy, handmade pair of kaleidoscopic glasses known as Future Eyes.
Is it every blogger's secret wish to go into retail? This year alone, we’ve seen Sight Unseen’s own Shape Shop, Rhiannon Gilmore's Dream Shop at the Walker, and as of this Saturday, Su Wu of I'm Revolting's pop-up at Creatures of Comfort LA, entitled We're Revolting. Perhaps it's inevitable that we would all want to touch and feel and hold the objects we covet from afar, and to make tangible the narrative we create every day. But maybe it’s just as simple as this: “It’s kind of lonely being a blogger,” Wu says. “And this was a reason to get to know people. It’s kind of a scary thing: You think, ok, I admire their work, but will I actually get along with them? But in fact, I’m still kind of basking in it.”
Here at Sight Unseen HQ, we've been keeping some pretty major news under wraps for a few months now, but it's time to finally let the cat out of the bag. If you've been reading our site, you know that we founded and ran the Noho Design District, a satellite show during ICFF, for four years. This year we made the tough decision to retire the NDD and launch in its place a new event that shares our namesake: Introducing Sight Unseen OFFSITE, a brand new design fair happening in New York from May 16-20, 2014, that will feature a curated selection of furniture and product launches by the best independent designers and forward-thinking brands, all under one gigantic roof.