Member Preview - Breaking Ground: Women in California Clay

Fri Sep 09 2022 at 02:00 pm to 04:00 pm
American Museum of Ceramic Art / AMOCA ,Pomona

Member Preview - Breaking Ground: Women in California Clay
  • Date

    Fri Sep 09 2022 at 02:00 pm to 04:00 pm

  • Location

    American Museum of Ceramic Art / AMOCA, 399 North Garey Avenue, Pomona, United States

  • Organizer

    American Museum of Ceramic Art

Members get early access to museum exhibitions! Be among the first to see "Breaking Ground: Women in California Clay."
About this Event

Breaking Ground: Women in California Clay is on view at AMOCA from September 10, 2022–February 19, 2023, and members get early access! Be among the first to see Breaking Ground by joining us on Member Preview Day on Friday, September 9.

This preview is complimentary for AMOCA Members. Be ready to show your membership card at check in; active membership will be verified by our staff members.

Want to join or renew your membership? Visit https://www.amoca.org/membership/ .

AMOCA Memberships are one of the largest sources of support for the Museum. Thank you for helping us raise awareness of and champion the ceramic arts!

Pictured: Crystal Morey, The RePlanting (detail), 2021. Porcelain. 12.5 x 8 x 6 inches.


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Breaking Ground: Women in California Clay celebrates 44 artists who have defined—and redefined—ceramics over the past 100 years. Many of the Golden State’s most innovative and impactful ceramic artists in the 20th and 21st centuries are women who faced adversity due to gender inequality and were often ignored or overlooked in favor of their male counterparts. These incredibly determined women pushed forward, driven by creativity and tenacity.

Breaking Ground highlights the significant shifts in California ceramics over several generations of women artists. The story is told in three chapters, using the artist’s “breaking ground period” (rather than their date of birth) to determine their place in history. The story begins with trailblazers Laura Andreson, Betty Davenport Ford, Stefanie Gruenberg, Vivika Heino, Elaine Katzer, Mary Lindheim, Martha Longenecker, Gertrud Natzler, Susan Peterson, Ruth Rippon, Susi Singer, Helen Ritcher Watson, Marguerite Wildenhain, and Beatrice Wood. These artists laid the groundwork for the field and inspired successive generations of artists.

The second chapter includes a disparate group of artists who explored—or are exploring—the female figure, feminism, and the creation of the perfect form. Works by Judy Chicago, Dora De Larios, Roseline Delisle, Viola Frey, Magdalena Suarez Frimkess, Phyllis Green, Margaret Keelan, Karen Koblitz, Marilyn Levine, Elsa Rady, Lisa Reinertson, Nancy Selvin, Anna Silver, and Sandy Simon mark a substantial break in artmaking from their predecessors.

The final chapter represents a younger generation of artists working to shift the perspective” and includes Ashwini Bhat, Christina Erives, Keiko Fukazawa, Jenny Hata Blumenfield, Julia Haft-Candell, Anabel Juarez, Cathy Lu, Brittany Mojo, Crystal Morey, Kristen Morgin, Annabeth Rosen, Erika Sanada, Joan Takayama Ogawa, Kim Tucker, Anna Valdez, and Bari Ziperstein. Their work, in many ways, continues the conversation of the artists featured in the second chapter to traverse the themes of politics, identity, the environment, and other prevailing issues of globalization, colonialism, and reclaiming histories that have become increasingly important in the lives of practicing women artists.

Assembled together for the first time in Breaking Ground, these works tell the compelling story of how women artists from California made, and continue to make, significant contributions to the American Studio Ceramics movement in profound and singular ways.

Pictured above: Erika Sanada, Murmur, 2021. Ceramic, cold finish. 9 x 14 x 11 inches.

Pictured below: Keiko Fukazawa, AKA Ar-15-20178262, 2017. Porcelain, plexiglass. 6 x 39 x 15 inches; Beatrice Wood, Untitled Bowl, nd. Ceramic, volcanic glaze. 4.75 x 8.5 x 8.5 inches; Annabeth Rosen, Untitled, nd. Ceramic. 12 x 12 x 8 inches; Anna Silver, Untitled, 1987. Ceramic, glaze. 19 x 13 x 13 inches.


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