Three ceramic artists who use industrial techniques in the production of their pieces and together have more than 150 years of making. The exhibition aims to celebrate the position of these ceramicists who have mastered these techniques, as Heritage Crafts states that Industrial Pottery is now on the Critically Endangered List. Echoing the lightness of the ceramic pieces, Jorge Sarsale’s paper works create an appealing dialogue with the vessels.

B O R R O W E D L I G H T

a recording of the first of many talks during the Borrowed Light show, at jaggedart, London.

ANGELA VERDON


Angela Verdon has worked with bone china clay through a number of residencies, first at the Gladstone Pottery Museum, then later in Japan, the Netherlands and Denmark.

These experiences have influenced her work, moving her style from paper thin pierced vessels to greater scale abstract sculptural forms.

Angela’s use of light and shade defines her sculptures and their references to architectural and natural forms.

 

 

SASHA WARDELL

Using industrial processes developed herself, Sasha Wardell works with bone china to create bespoke vases, bowls, lighting and tea ware. Her style combines pure white slip cast bone china with unique decorating and a palette of subtle, muted colour. Each of her pieces is made individually.

Sasha is renowned for her teaching and passing on the legacy of industrial techniques to new generations of artists through her workshops for bone china and mould making as well as her books. 

ALISON GAUTREY


Capturing the feeling of movement within the simplicity of form,  Alison Gautrey crafts porcelain vessels in a monochrome yet translucent palette.

She has developed a new method for spinning porcelain, inspired by contemporary applications of industrial techniques.

Alison combines bone china and porcelain together, achieving a fragility whilst exploring the distortions that occur with the materials.

 

 

JAGGEDART

Marylebone High St, London