FunctionFest

at Clay Center of New Orleans (www.nolaclay.org) in New Orleans, Louisiana, through December 1.

1 Robert Long’s oil can teapot and funnel, salt-fired stoneware, fired to cone 10, 2018.2 Andrew McIntyre’s jar and stand, porcelain, soda fired to cone 11, 2018.

Steve Loucks

at The Kiln Studio Gallery (www.thekilnstudio.com) in Fairhope, Alabama, through November 1.

1 Steve Loucks’ Double Combo Bowl on Cones, 18 in. (46 cm) in length, wheel-thrown and assembled white stoneware, multiple layered glazes, fired to cone 10 in reduction, 2018.

Cup: The Intimate Object XIV

at Charlie Cummings Gallery (www.charliecummingsgallery.com) in Gainesville, Florida, through November 30.

1 Karin Kraemer’s Rooster Mug, 5 in. (13 cm) in width, earthenware, majolica.2 Yoko Sekino-Bové’s Red Poppy Tumbler, 6 in. (15 cm) in height, porcelain, sgraffito, glaze painting. 3 Wesley Harvey’s mug, 5 in. (13 cm) in width, earthenware, terra sigillata, underglaze, glaze, commercial decals, luster.

 

4 Eric Botbyl’s Crackled Scraggler, 4½ in. (11 cm) in height, stoneware, slip, glazes. 5 Senta Achée’s In Full Bloom Tumbler, 4½ in. (11 cm) in height, porcelain, underglaze, sgraffito. 6 Chris Chaney’s Dazzle Yunomi, 3½ in. (9 cm) in height, wood- and soda-fired porcelaneous stoneware.7 En Iwamura’s Businessman Cup, 5 in. (13 cm) in width, stoneware. Photos: Charlie Cummings Gallery.

 

Drowning

at Waverly Street Gallery (www.waverlystreetgallery.com) in Bethesda, Maryland, through November 3.

1 Kanika Sircar’s Red Tide 1, 6½ in. (17 cm) in height, handbuilt porcelain, slips, underglazes, glaze, decals, fired to cone 6 in oxidation, 2018.2 Kanika Sircar’s Opheliad 1, 7½ in. (19 cm) in height, thrown, altered, and handbuilt porcelain, slips, underglazes, underglaze tissue transfers, glaze, laser and overglaze decals, fired to cone 6 in oxidation, 2018.

Eccentricity

at James May Gallery (www.jamesmaygallery.com) in Algoma, Wisconsin, through December 27.

1 Lisa York’s pitcher, 11 in. (28 cm) in height, wheel-thrown and altered soda-fired ceramics, wax resist.

In House

at Jane Hartsook Gallery at Greenwich House Pottery (www.greenwichhousepottery.org) in New York, New York, through December 10.

1 Hiroe Hanazono’s Brunch Set, porcelain, 2017.2 Pedro Ramirez’s Festuca, ceramic, clay, grass, 2015.

Tricks of the Trade: Illusions in Craft-Based Media

at Fuller Craft Museum (http://fullercraft.org) in Brockton, Massachusetts, through November 18.

1 Steven Hansen’s Brockton Team, 15 in. (38 cm) in length, stoneware, 2008. Photo: Dean Powell.l2 Richard Shaw’s House of Pencils on a Band Wheel, 13 in. (33 cm) in length, porcelain, glaze, overglaze transfers, 2014.

Living with Clay: California Ceramics Collections

at California State University, Fullerton, Begovich Gallery (www.fullerton.edu/arts/art/galleries/begovich_gallery ) in Fullerton, California, through November 17.

1 Babs Haenen’s vessel, 10 in. (25 cm) in height, porcelain, 1983. Courtesy of the Diane and Igal Silber Collection. 2 Kevin Snipes’ Sweet Birdies Vase, 10 in. (25 cm) in height, porcelain, underglaze, overglaze enamel, 2009. Courtesy of the Richard Oelschlaeger Collection.3 Gareth Mason’s large vessel, 20½ in. (52 cm) in height, porcelain, 2009. Courtesy of the Judy and Richard Jacobs Collection. Photo: Eric Stoner.4 Viola Frey’s Venus and the Rooster, 14 in. (36 cm) in height, earthenware, glaze, china paint, 1976. Courtesy of the Gloria and Sonny Kamm Collection.

 

5 Duncan Ayscough’s long-necked vase, 13 in. (33 cm) in height, earthenware, 2009. Courtesy of the Judy and Richard Jacobs Collection. 6 Jaguar Effigy Vessel, 14¼ in. (36 cm) in height, earthenware, burnished pigment, 1200–1550 CE. Courtesy of the MAW Collection of Pre-Columbian Art.

 

7 Hector Javier Martinez Mendez’s The Artists of Mexico, 16 in. (41 cm) in height, earthenware, 2017.

 

 

Topics: Ceramic Artists