Ceramics: Art and Perception

Sheryl Zacharia: Shaped by the Southwest

Santa Fe-based artist Sheryl Zacharia has replaced the joy she found in her previous career as a professional singer-songwriter with the equally satisfying joy of art making. “Pattern and form are rhythm, palette is harmony, lines and shapes are lyrical,” she said in an artist statement. “I’m striving to make visual poetry.”

Zachary’s latest solo exhibition of all new work, , featured cezlestial themed pieces such as and . The ceramic forms combine straight-edged blocks

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

More from Ceramics: Art and Perception

Ceramics: Art and Perception5 min read
Fresh New Talent at the British Ceramics Biennial
Nurturing, inspiring and showcasing new talent are at the heart of what we do at the British Ceramics Biennial – and have been since we started our work back in 2009. The most prominent way that we do this is through our platform for emerging ceramic
Ceramics: Art and Perception21 min read
Collage, Montage, and Perception: Unveiling Postcolonial Aesthetics of the Female Body in Printed Ceramics
Some of my earliest recollections include examining myself in a mirror and mentally separating my physical attributes. Growing up in India, my appearance was frequently commented on and either praised, or criticised, which is normal in our culture (C
Ceramics: Art and Perception3 min read
Eiji Uematsu at Alison Bradley Projects, New York City
Each of Eiji Uematsu’s modest-scale ceramic objects and plaques is a succinct statement. Each seems considered, and then honed so that it is nothing more than it needs to be. The 16 diminutive works in Alison Bradley’s small New York gallery employ a

Related