Scroll over and click on image to enlarge
Title: Torso
Artist: Janie Ramsey
Material: Ceramic, wax
Dimensions: H: 12 cm, W: 11.5 cm, D:7 cm
£ 134
Ref.: JR2
To view more work by Janie Ramsey, please click on the tag in the right column.
Scroll over and click on image to enlarge
Title: Torso
Artist: Janie Ramsey
Material: Ceramic, wax
Dimensions: H: 12 cm, W: 11.5 cm, D:7 cm
£ 134
Ref.: JR2
To view more work by Janie Ramsey, please click on the tag in the right column.
A few weeks have passed since the last ‘What’s in Store’. You have been keeping our artists busy with plenty of commissions. Next to bespoke orders we have also had plenty of new work delivered. Jan Brewerton, Lincoln Kirby-Bell and Kate Packer have been busy. Lincoln’s latest design includes a range of tableware and this wallplates with frogs. Kate has been busy making jewellery, including her popular bug brooches and wall pieces.
We also have a new ceramic artist at 45 Southside Janie Ramsey. Watch this space for a post on her work in detail soon. Janie’s work is inspired by her time in Turkey as well as archaeology.
Coincidentally, one of the pewter wallpanels delivered by Melanie Guy recently is called Turkish Atmosphere. It is the smaller more colourful pewter panel underneath the larger panel. Also back with new work are Hamlin and Wright with their fused glass panels towards the back of the picture.
‘Paris’ is a rare Cityscape mosaic by Jude Freeman. Jenny Beavan and Jane Price have also created new work.
It has been a while, but we have a new web-site. Perfect time for an update on what is currently in the gallery.
We have had several new deliveries of jewellery, wirework by Kate Packer, for example, and also a delivery of Remon Jephcott’s lovely (and humorous) ceramics and ceramic jewellery. New are these decaying fruit. We have apples, a pear and a cherry. The fly on the apple is made from real silver.
Jenny Beavan has delivered new work of both her stunning ceramic panels on glass and a sculptural work. You can find out more about her and her work in this month’s Ceramic Review. We still have some copies. We also have new tableware by Lincoln Kirby-Bell. In addition, he has made some wallvases or flower pots in his signature style.
Glass artist Richard Glass and metalsmith Noah Taylor have also dropped by new work. Some of Noah’s latest sculptures are visible in the image above along the back wall next to one of Richard’s Splash Sculptures.
More pewter work by Melanie Guy has also arrived, there are new ‘wallsculptures’ but also a selection of tableware and sculptural works, which is a new departure for Melanie. This includes coasters, dishes, paperweights and a very elegant Sushi dish. On the shelf above Melanie’s work are Rebecca Harvey’s latest porcelain vessels. Her work is smooth yet tactile with a number of different shaped bowls of various sizes as well as her serving sets on Oak plates with Cornish Pewter Spoons.
There is a great article in Ceramic Review about ceramic artist Jenny Beavan who works in china clay. We stock Ceramic Review, Craft Arts, Crafts and Craft and Design magazines as well as Jenny’s work.
The beginning of April has been busy with new work delivered by Lincoln Kirby-Bell, Noah Taylor, Taz Pollard, Jan Brewerton, Kate Packer and Loula-Bells.
We will also be launching a new web-site very soon, with a new an improved blog and online gallery. The old site is still there, if you would like to view a selection of work available.
Tim Andrews has gained an International reputation for his distinctive smoke-fired and raku ceramics. Many works are black and white with linear decoration or burnished with muted coloured slips. His pieces have been acquired for both public and private collections and are exhibited widely across the UK and abroad.
He says in his own artist’s statement:
I have been ‘bashing clay’ for thirty five years now – a landmark that comes with a certain amount of reflection. I often describe myself as being a fundamentally lazy workaholic. A personal contradiction that reflects the nature of the job – or is it the other way round? The desire to push on in an attempt to ‘get it right’ seems to continue and the words of David Leach still seem to echo around the studio “…so are you any good today Andrews?”
Ceramics doesn’t recognise age and only nods its head occasionally towards experience. The raku firing process continues to surprise and frustrate me. Of all ceramic methods, Raku in particular prefers to remain feral by nature, refusing to be tied down or controlled. Of course that is its appeal as well as its frustration. I still find working within a limited colour palette provides endless possibilities. The same raw materials have been used for centuries: clay – river washed and stratified, metal oxides and minerals from the ground used to produce colour and depth in glazes. The historical and material gaps are small. Human intervention and expression transforms and imparts meaning that we can all engage with. Linear decoration using smoke and ‘resist’ remains a favourite technique – black, white and just a few glazes. The ‘soft’ burnished or glazed surfaces for me, lend a warmth and intimacy to the pieces, integrating form and decoration
However, raku potters are by nature explorers and a trip to China a couple of years ago rekindled my interest in porcelain and particularly celadon after a visit to the old Sung Dynasty kiln sites in Longquan. My most recent ceramics combine raku with black stoneware and porcelain. The technical and aesthetic challenges of putting together coherent pieces using different clay bodies and multiple firings in this way are… to say the least….stretching. My primary goal is always for the work to have integrity and enough presence to make it worth taking up space in this cluttered world. Some pieces involve the use of vessel forms within ‘saggars’. Traditionally, saggars were clay containers in which delicate ceramics were protected in the kiln. These new pieces explore ideas about containment and protection – and the notion of beauty and the way we perceive and value it.
“An artist’s work is deeply rooted in the psychology of the maker. In these new forms Tim Andrews has found his questioning spirit and one that escapes and refuses to be tied down to a single symbolic meaning”
“…so are you any good today Andrews?” Well maybe another cup of coffee and some procrastination and I’ll see….
Tim Andrews’ stunning new owrk is on display at 45 Southside Gallery throughout March 2013.
We have started the 2013 with some new artists and plenty of new work by others. Corinna Butler is new to 45 Southside Gallery. Corinna and has lived in Plymouth for 12 years. She started painting when she was in her teens and then learnt to scuba dive. Diving opened her the door to an underwater world which has inspired her ever since. She joined the Plymouth College of Art to study working with glass. “I like to experiment with different styles and forms. This work was inspired by cloth and tartan, especially ragged pieces and off cuts. I wanted to allow light to move on the pieces so I have left them exposed to the viewer.”
Nicola Crocker who took part in October’s Westcountry Potters Association exhibition has also brought in some new work including a range of framed ceramic landscape tiles.
Another popular ceramic artist Rebecca Harvey’s new work includes a range of bowls in all sizes, vases and beakers in her distinctive colours and tactile surfaces. She has had a busy year after an exhibition in Fortnum and Mason last year. The new work also includes some of her very popular serving dishes on Cornish oak plates and with Cornish pewter spoons.
With Mother’s Day coming up very soon our selection of ceramic, silver and wirework jewellery continues to sell well.
We are featuring Devon Potter Tim Andrews this month. Watch out for some images of his work here very soon. The exhibition looks great and it is almost a shame to part with some of the stunning pieces!
As always you can view more work in detail in our online shop.
45 Southside Gallery starts a new year of exhibitions with an internationally renowned and collected, but locally based potter Tim Andrews. Tim Andrews has gained an International reputation for his distinctive smoke-fired and raku ceramics. Many works are black and white with linear decoration or burnished with muted coloured slips. His pieces have been acquired for both public and private collections and are exhibited widely across the UK and abroad.
Tim has been working as a potter for more than 35 years starting as an apprentice to David Leach in the late 1970s. Tim describes his own work and experience as : “Ceramics doesn’t recognise age and only nods its head occasionally towards experience. The raku firing process continues to surprise and frustrate me. Of all ceramic methods, Raku in particular prefers to remain feral by nature, refusing to be tied down or controlled. Of course that is its appeal as well as its frustration. I still find working within a limited colour palette provides endless possibilities. The same raw materials have been used for centuries: clay – river washed and stratified, metal oxides and minerals from the ground used to produce colour and depth in glazes. The historical and material gaps are small. Human intervention and expression transforms and imparts meaning that we can all engage with. Linear decoration using smoke and ‘resist’ remains a favourite technique – black, white and just a few glazes. The ‘soft’ burnished or glazed surfaces for me, lend a warmth and intimacy to the pieces, integrating form and decoration“
His latest work was inspired by a visit to China, where he visited old Sung Dynasty kiln sites. He has since mastered some very difficult techniques and challenges to combine raku, porcelain and black stoneware. The outcome is some truly stunning work, which will be on exhibition at 45 Southside in March 2013. All are welcome to meet Tim Andrews at 45 Southside Gallery on the evening of the 1st of March 2013 from 6-8pm.
Title: Butterfly Brooch
Artist: Remon Jephcott
Material: ceramic with transfer print and gold lustre glaze, backed with lace, pin
Dimensions: H: 4 cm W: 7 cm D: 0.7 cm
£ 39
Ref.: RJ4
To view more work by Remon Jephcott , please click on the tag in the right column.
Remon Jephcott’s jewellery is new to 45 Southside.
The jewellery is a response to Remon’s research into the world of the Victorians, focusing on the realm of the feminine . An aspect of her inquiry has been inspired by the Victorians love of insect jewellery of all types, which reflected their fascination with classifying nature.
Each piece goes through several kiln firings, from the initial bisque firing to the final lustre firing, which gives each piece it’s precious quality.
The range includes a wide variety of designs including flowers, birds, insects and other designs as well as butterfly shaped brooches, necklaces and earrings.
To view a small selection in more detail, please visit out online gallery.
Title: Fly heart brooch
Artist: Remon Jephcott
Material: ceramic with transfer print and silver lustre glaze, backed with lace, pin
Dimensions: H: 2.7cm W: 2.8cm D: 0.7cm
£ 29
Ref.: RJ1
To view more work by Remon Jephcott , please click on the tag in the right column.