Ceramics: Art and Perception

Editorial

NM So–we’re on the move. Again.

BM I’ve only just got used to this space.

NM I’m unsure the landlords got used to us.

BM You did pay the rent, didn’t you?

NM Of course. But now they wants us to pay in cash. No more bartering pots.

BM I’m sorry to leave here.

Me too. It’s been better for us than the converted hairdresser salon we had

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Ceramics: Art and Perception

Ceramics: Art and Perception4 min read
Jane Yang-D’Haene at Bienvenu Steinberg & J, New York City
Jane Yang-D’Haene was born in South Korea and came to New York in 1984 to study architecture. Now Brooklynbased, she began to work in clay only in 2016 and is using it for tableware, lighting, furniture and vessels of the sort in this exhibition. Up
Ceramics: Art and Perception6 min readWorld
How Illustrations on Porcelain Helped Raise Children in Ancient China
Historically, Chinese people have believed that illustrations encouraged morality, discipline, and favorable conduct in children. This ideology gave birth to a generation of images based on child-rearing, with earlier works depicting fictional charac
Ceramics: Art and Perception7 min read
Playing with Fire CLAY Museum of Ceramic Art Denmark
It all started with a visit to the Danish Design Museum in Copenhagen about 30 years ago. British potter Edmund de Waal was faced with an old-fashioned display case with a dense grouping of Axel Salto’s ceramics. There they were, side by side, these

Related Books & Audiobooks