Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
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Period: 1980s
Medium: Ceramic
"Ceramic Box with Lid" Stoneware Cream Glaze w/ Organic Attachments
By Gawaine Dart
Located in Detroit, MI
ONE WEEK ONLY SALE
The rich tones of the stoneware clay come through the soft creamy glaze that drips over the surface like melted vanilla ice cream over red devil cake. There are i...
Category
1980s Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Ceramic, Stoneware, Glaze
Post Modern Italian Passover Seder Plate Richard Ginori Art Porcelain Judaica
Located in Surfside, FL
Johanan Vitta, painter, born 1941, Jerusalem. Lives in Italy.
Education Firenze, Florence, Italy
He designed the famous La Sinagoga di Firenze poster. The poster features a painterly synagogue it was done for the “Comunita Israelitica"
He has also designed Judaic ritual objects including a menorah that is in a famous museum collection. Arman, Elio Carmi, Eugenio Carmi, Lucio Del Pezzo, Guy De Rougemont, Maurizio Galimberti, David Gerstein, Claude Lalanne, Marino Marinelli, Mimmo Paladino, Arnaldo Pomodoro, Tobia Rava...
Category
1980s Post-Modern Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Porcelain
Green-Lidded Vessel
By Karen Karnes
Located in Wilton, CT
salt-glazed stoneware
Category
1980s Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Stoneware
Tribute to Jean Arp
By Jean Arp
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Tribute to Jean Arp. This decorative piece has been painted by hand on glazed porcelain with an intense red color.
Jean Arp Sargadelos Porcelain Vase. last quarter 20th Century sign...
Category
1980s Abstract Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Porcelain
" La pensée " unic prototype
Located in CANNES, FR
Jean Michel FOLON .
Né en Belgique , Jean michel Folon suit des cours de design industriel dans les années 50. Il s'embarque des l'age de 21 ans pour la France à Bougival où il vit c...
Category
1980s Abstract Geometric Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Ceramic
Soup Tureen with Wood Spoon
By Karen Karnes
Located in Wilton, CT
salt-glazed stoneware
Category
1980s Abstract Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Stoneware
Tribute to Joan Miró
By Joan Miró
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Tribute to Joan Miró, painter, sculptor, engraver and Spanish ceramist, considered one of the maximum representatives of surrealism.
This decorative piece has been painted by hand on glazed porcelain with an intense red colour, cooking in this stage at 800 º C (for third time). For this reason the production process is more laborious.
All hand decorated and finished at its two factories in the region. Homage A Miró...
Category
1980s Abstract Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Porcelain
Homage à Kahnweiler
Located in Berlin, DE
Irmgard Biernath (1905 Waldheim in Saxony - 1998 Mainz), Hommage à Kahnweiler, 1984. Terracotta relief, burnished red body, 43.5 x 38 cm, mounted on support plate, in wooden frame 57 x 49.5 cm, monogrammed "IB" at lower right.
- Isolated patina losses, but overall good condition, frame slightly bumped.
- The Appearance of Genius-
This homage to Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler shows the gallerist and art theorist as Pablo Picasso portrayed him in his lithographic portrait of 1957.
As an innovative Parisian gallery owner, Kahnweiler had exclusively represented Picasso since 1911, while Picasso had painted his famous portrait of Kahnweiler the previous year as a major work of Cubism. And it is Picasso who appears at the centre of Irmgard Biernath's image. Here, his face echoes the features of the self-portrait he painted in 1907 in the Prague National Gallery.
His eyes are wide open as he gazes into the distance, surrounded by the works of his artistic vision that have already taken shape. On the right is the bronze "Man with Sheep...
Category
1980s Contemporary Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Terracotta
Ceramic Sculptural bowl
Located in New York, NY
Peter Voulkos
Ceramic Sculptural Dish, ca. 1985
Sculpted ceramic
Hand-signed by artist, Incised signature on the base.
1.5 x 11.5 inches
This charger plate by Voulkos features a Greek-influenced stylized birds and leaf design. Peter Voulkos is an American artist of Greek descent. The abstraction of animal and nature elements paired with the earthy, mottled gray and brown against brown background make this work beautiful. This work was featured in the exhibition "On Black Mountain: The Bauhaus Legacy in America", at the Sager Braudis Gallery (now Sager Reeves), in Columbia Missouri from April 5, 2019 to April. 27, 2019 and is reproduced in page 53 of the exhibition catalogue.
We will provide a complimentary copy of the exhibition catalogue to the buyer of this work.
Born in 1924 to Greek immigrant parents in the town of Bozeman, Montana, Peter Voulkos is one of America’s most significant sculptors of the 20th century. Voulkos got his start in art in the late 1940s, when he was studying at Montana State College, Bozeman on the G.I. Bill, after being drafted and serving as an airplane armorer-gunner in the Pacific in World War II. In classes with Frances Senska, he discovered ceramics, the medium that would characterize his career. After graduating from Montana State College, Bozeman in 1951, Voulkos moved west and earned his MFA from the California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland, California.
Returning to Montana after graduation, Voulkos attracted attention “as a prodigious natural potter and a producer of elegantly thrown functional earthenware,” according to Roberta Smith for the New York Times. He also produced dinnerware to sell through high-quality stores, and was noted for his wax-resist method of decoration.Voulkos gained a reputation as a master of ceramics techniques, winning twenty-nine prizes and awards from 1949 through 1955. However, a summer spent teaching at the experimental Black Mountain College (he was invited to teach at BMC by Karen Karnes) near Asheville, North Carolina in 1953 resulted in a dramatic shift in Voulkos’s artistic priorities, as well as his aesthetic. It was at Black Mountain College that Voulkos met Robert Rauschenberg, John Cage, Merce Cunningham and Charles Olson. He then visited New York City (as a guest of pianist David Tudor and Mary Catherine Richards) and encountered Philip Guston, Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline—Abstract Expressionist painters who influenced the new direction Voulkos would go on to pursue.
In 1954, Voulkos was invited to teach at the Los Angeles County Art Institute (now Otis), and he established a new ceramics department and graduate program that attracted other young artists including John Mason, Ken Price, Billy Al Bengston and Paul Soldner. It was here that, inspired by the scale and spontaneity of the New York School, Voulkos began to build progressively larger works that cast aside utility and abandoned ceramic conventions. Decoration became aggressive, as he slashed at and pierced the clay, which he then energetically painted with glaze. Peter Voulkos exhibited these new works in shows at the Landau Gallery in Los Angeles, which announced to the world a new way of approaching ceramics.
Disagreements with the more conservative administrators of the LA County Art Institute led to Voulkos’s departure for the University of California, Berkeley, in 1959. While at Berkeley, Voulkos experimented with bronze and produced large-scale bronze sculpture, while continuing his ceramic work and doing demonstrations of ceramics throughout the U.S. In 1979, a young ceramist named Peter Callas...
Category
1980s Abstract Expressionist Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Ceramic, Mixed Media, Glaze
Vingt ans de B.S.N.
By Zao Wou-Ki
Located in Paris, FR
Earthenware, 1986
Publisher : Atelier de Segries (Moustiers-Sainte-Marie)
Diameter: 25cm
The energy of the artist's gesture can be seen in the peta...
Category
1980s Abstract Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Earthenware
Pillow by David Shaner (INV# NP3795)
By David Shaner
Located in Morton Grove, IL
David Shaner
Pillow (INV# NP3795)
stoneware and glaze
5 x 11 x 11"
circa 1980
signed
*Featured in Ceramics Monthly magazine (2003 and 2009)
DAVID SHANER (1934 – 2002)
David Shan...
Category
1980s Contemporary Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Stoneware, Glaze
" Jonas et la Baleine" . 1989 . sculpture RECTO / VERSO
Located in CANNES, FR
Gilbert Portanier ( Cannes . 1926 )
Sculpture RECTO / VERSO année 1989 . signé .
Size: 37 cm .
posé sur un socle amovible sur une tige d'acier 12 x 12 cm .
" En quelques mots "
...
Category
1980s Analytic Cubist Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Ceramic
Untitled Slab with Colored Tears (#891)
Located in Kansas City, MO
Jim Leedy
Untitled Slab with Colored Tears (#891)
Raku-Fired Stoneware
1989
Approx. 20 in in diameter
COA provided
Comes with original papers
Ref.: #891
Ref...
Category
1980s American Modern Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Stoneware, Glaze
Abstract Painted Ceramic Tile Pop Art Painting Italian Neo Figurative Painting
By Italo Scanga
Located in Surfside, FL
This painted ceramic tile by Italo Scanga, epitomizes the characteristics of his oeuvre. Polychrome and vibrant art from the Memphis Milano era.
This is signed with his initials. This is reminiscent of the mid century work of Jean Lurcat and Jean Picart le Doux.
Italo Scanga (June 6, 1932 - July 7, 2001), an Italian-born American artist, was known for his sculptures, prints and, paintings, mostly created from found objects. In his youth in Calabria, Italy he worked as a cabinetmaker's apprentice and studies sculpture with a man who carved statues of saints.
Italo Scanga was an innovative neo Dada, neo-Expressionist, and neo-Cubist multimedia artist who made assemblage, collage, sculptures of ordinary objects and created prints, glass, and ceramic works. Modern Italian abstract geometric folk art.
Scanga's materials included natural objects like branches and seashells, as well as kitsch figurines, castoff musical instruments and decorative trinkets salvaged from flea markets and thrift shops. He combined these ingredients into free-standing assemblages, which he then painted. Although visually ebullient, the results sometimes referred to gruesome episodes from Greek mythology or the lives and deaths of martyred saints.
He considered his artistic influences to be sweepingly pan-cultural, from African sculpture to Giorgio de Chirico. He often collaborated with the sculptor Dale Chihuly, who was a close friend.
Constructed of wood and glass, found objects or fabric, his ensembles reflect a trio of activities—working, eating, and praying. These activities dominate the lives of those who live close to the land, but they are also activities that are idealized by many who contemplate, romantically, a simpler, bucolic life.
Italo graduated from Michigan State University where he befriended fellow artists Richard Merkin and David Pease. He studied under Lindsey Decker who introduces him to welding and sculpture after his initial interest in photography. Also studies with Charles Pollock, the brother of Abstract Expressionist Jackson Pollock. His first teaching job was at University of Wisconsin (through 1964). where he met Harvey Littleton, a fellow instructor. He later moves to Providence, Rhode Island,I to teach at Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). Is colleagues with artists Richard Merkin and Hardu Keck. Starts a correspondence with HC Westermann. Spends summers teaching at Brown University; colleague of Hugh Townley. Moves to State College, PA, and teaches at Pennsylvania State University for one year. Meets artists Juris Ubans, Harry Anderson, Richard Frankel, and Richard Calabro, who remain friends throughout his career.
1967: David Pease helps him get a tenure track position at Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia, PA, . Artists he works closely with include Ernest Silva, Lee Jaffe, Donald Gill, and William Schwedler. Meets graduate student Dale Chihuly while lecturing at RISD and develops a lifelong friendship.
1969: One person exhibition, Baylor Art Gallery, Baylor University, Waco, TX. Works very closely with students Larry Becker and Heidi Nivling (who later run a gallery in Philadelphia, PA), and Harry Anderson. Welcomes many artists into his home including Donald Judd, Dan Flavin, Bruce Nauman (a former student), Vito Acconci, Ree Morton and Rafael Ferrer.
1973: "Saints Glass" at 112 Greene Street Gallery, NYC. Installation at the Institute of Contemporary Art at University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA. Meets Gordon Matta Clark and contributes to an artist cookbook. Goes to Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA, founded by Dale Chihuly, as a visiting artist. He continues to work there annually through 2001. Works over the years with Pilchuck artists Richard Royal, Seaver Leslie, Jamie Carpenter, Joey Kirkpatrick, Flora Mace, Robbie Miller, Billy Morris, Buster Simpson, Toots Zynsky, Howard Ben Tre...
Category
1980s Neo-Expressionist Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Enamel
FALL GARDEN BASKET AND VASE (INV# NP3739) by Betty Woodman
Located in Morton Grove, IL
FALL GARDEN BASKET AND VASE (INV# NP3739)
Betty Woodman
glazed earthenware
13 x 18.5 x 12”
1987
signed by artist
Category
1980s Contemporary Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Ceramic
Abstract Painted Ceramic Tile Pop Art Painting Italian Neo Figurative Painting
By Italo Scanga
Located in Surfside, FL
This painted ceramic tile by Italo Scanga, epitomizes the characteristics of his oeuvre. Polychrome and vibrant art from the Memphis Milano era.
This is signed with his initials. This is reminiscent of the mid century work of Jean Lurcat and Jean Picart le Doux.
Italo Scanga (June 6, 1932 - July 7, 2001), an Italian-born American artist, was known for his sculptures, prints and, paintings, mostly created from found objects. In his youth in Calabria, Italy he worked as a cabinetmaker's apprentice and studies sculpture with a man who carved statues of saints.
Italo Scanga was an innovative neo Dada, neo-Expressionist, and neo-Cubist multimedia artist who made assemblage, collage, sculptures of ordinary objects and created prints, glass, and ceramic works. Modern Italian abstract geometric folk art.
Scanga's materials included natural objects like branches and seashells, as well as kitsch figurines, castoff musical instruments and decorative trinkets salvaged from flea markets and thrift shops. He combined these ingredients into free-standing assemblages, which he then painted. Although visually ebullient, the results sometimes referred to gruesome episodes from Greek mythology or the lives and deaths of martyred saints.
He considered his artistic influences to be sweepingly pan-cultural, from African sculpture to Giorgio de Chirico. He often collaborated with the sculptor Dale Chihuly, who was a close friend.
Constructed of wood and glass, found objects or fabric, his ensembles reflect a trio of activities—working, eating, and praying. These activities dominate the lives of those who live close to the land, but they are also activities that are idealized by many who contemplate, romantically, a simpler, bucolic life.
Italo graduated from Michigan State University where he befriended fellow artists Richard Merkin and David Pease. He studied under Lindsey Decker who introduces him to welding and sculpture after his initial interest in photography. Also studies with Charles Pollock, the brother of Abstract Expressionist Jackson Pollock. His first teaching job was at University of Wisconsin (through 1964). where he met Harvey Littleton, a fellow instructor. He later moves to Providence, Rhode Island,I to teach at Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). Is colleagues with artists Richard Merkin and Hardu Keck. Starts a correspondence with HC Westermann. Spends summers teaching at Brown University; colleague of Hugh Townley. Moves to State College, PA, and teaches at Pennsylvania State University for one year. Meets artists Juris Ubans, Harry Anderson, Richard Frankel, and Richard Calabro, who remain friends throughout his career.
1967: David Pease helps him get a tenure track position at Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia, PA, . Artists he works closely with include Ernest Silva, Lee Jaffe, Donald Gill, and William Schwedler. Meets graduate student Dale Chihuly while lecturing at RISD and develops a lifelong friendship.
1969: One person exhibition, Baylor Art Gallery, Baylor University, Waco, TX. Works very closely with students Larry Becker and Heidi Nivling (who later run a gallery in Philadelphia, PA), and Harry Anderson. Welcomes many artists into his home including Donald Judd, Dan Flavin, Bruce Nauman (a former student), Vito Acconci, Ree Morton and Rafael Ferrer.
1973: "Saints Glass" at 112 Greene Street Gallery, NYC. Installation at the Institute of Contemporary Art at University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA. Meets Gordon Matta Clark and contributes to an artist cookbook. Goes to Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA, founded by Dale Chihuly, as a visiting artist. He continues to work there annually through 2001. Works over the years with Pilchuck artists Richard Royal, Seaver Leslie, Jamie Carpenter, Joey Kirkpatrick, Flora Mace, Robbie Miller, Billy Morris, Buster Simpson, Toots Zynsky, Howard Ben Tre...
Category
1980s Neo-Expressionist Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Enamel
Untitled by Ron Nagle (INV# NP3614)
By Ron Nagle
Located in Morton Grove, IL
Ron Nagle
Untitled (INV# NP3614)
clay and glaze
5.25 x 4 x 4"
1986
Ron Nagle is one of the most important sculptors in the United States. He work is highly collected and included in museum collections such as Shigaraki Museum, Japan; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Musée de Plastique, Paris; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; and the Stedelijk Museum in the Netherlands. He was born in San Francisco and began working with ceramics during the 1950s as a high school student. In 1961 he apprenticed to Peter Voulkos at the University of California, Berkeley, and later exhibited his work alongside Voulkos, Ken Price, and other innovative West Coast artists working in clay. His work is inspired by such artists as Giorgio Morandi, Phillip Guston, and George Herriman...
Category
1980s Contemporary Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Clay, Glaze
Untitled Sculpture
Located in Kansas City, MO
Yukio Yamamoto
Untitled
Ceramic
1988
Approx. 19 x 22 x 12 in
COA provided
Comes with original papers
Ref.: 924802-1011
Yukio Yamamoto was born in the Ako district of Hyogo Prefecture, Japan, in 1925.
In 1953, he spent a year as a research student at the Tanabe class of the Department of Ceramics at Kyoto Institute of Technology. Yukio studied the history of pottery of the past centuries of this well-known Hemiji Castle domain. He would also research kiln designs through fieldwork as his thesis project.
By 1954, he built his first Noborigama chambered climbing kiln in Tenjin-Cho, Himeji City, teaching the old-world firing process classes. This would become the first step in Yamamoto’s revival of the Tozan style of Anagama and Noborigama down-draft style wood-fired kilns. In 1600, the kiln process had been at its height and had mainly provided wares to Himeji Castle.
As an artist, he typically worked in ash-covered high-fired unglazed ceramics...
Category
1980s Modern Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Ceramic
Green Ceramic Woman on a Plate, colorful, abstract
Located in New York, NY
A plate with a green and yellow ceramic woman's body from waiter up attached on it.
Signed and dated verso.
Born in Havana in 1950, Alfonzo w...
Category
1980s Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Ceramic
"Pierced Slab Top Jar, " Terra Sigillata by Christine LePage
Located in Milwaukee, WI
"Pierced Slab Top Jar" is a ceramic sculpture made with Terra Sigillata by Christine LePage. It is pierced in the neck of the jar and was made in black...
Category
1980s Contemporary Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Terracotta
"Raku Vase with Fireworks, " colorful unique vase design lovers
By Marty Marcus
Located in Milwaukee, WI
"Raku Vase with Fireworks" is an original ceramic vase by Marty Marcus. The artist signed the piece on the bottom. It features brightly colored abstract patterns on an earth-toned background. The vessel is a unique piece of décor priced well under $900. Part of the Design Lovers Sale...
Category
1980s Post-Modern Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Ceramic
"Flower (Small Bowl), " Doubl Walled Porcelain Vessel by Wayne Fischer
Located in Milwaukee, WI
"Flower" is a double-walled porcelain ceramic bowl by Wayne Fischer. It features delicate pink and white coloration.
4 1/2" x 7" diameter
Milwaukee ceramist currently residing in ...
Category
1980s Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Porcelain
"Double Walled Bowl, " Porcelain vessel by Wayne Fischer
Located in Milwaukee, WI
This piece is an original porcelain bowl by Wayne Fischer. It is a double-walled ceramic and features delicate natural coloration.
10 3/4" diameter
Milwaukee ceramist currently res...
Category
1980s Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Porcelain
"White Wedding Tears, " Porcelain and Ink signed by Marjorie Mau
By Marjorie Mau
Located in Milwaukee, WI
"White Wedding Tears" is an original porcelain and ink piece by Marjorie Mau. The artist signed the sculpture.
16" x 14" x 3" art
Artist's Statement:
"My works are about the act o...
Category
1980s Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Mixed Media, Porcelain, Ink
"Double Walled Bowl, " Porcelain Vessel by Wayne Fischer
Located in Milwaukee, WI
This piece is an original bowl by Wayne Fischer. It is a double-walled bowl made from porcelain and features delicate and subtle coloration.
11" diameter
Milwaukee ceramist current...
Category
1980s Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Porcelain
Untitled
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original clay wall sculpture by American artist Neil Tetkowski.
Category
1980s Abstract Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Clay
Large Closed Form by Toshiko Takaezu (INV# NP5031)
Located in Morton Grove, IL
Toshiko Takaezu
Large Closed Form (INV# NP5031)
10.75 x 8.5 x 8.5"
1980
signed by artist
Toshiko Takaezu (June 17, 1922 – March 9, 2011) was an American ceramic artist and painter. ...
Category
1980s Contemporary Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Stoneware, Glaze
Lidded Venice Beach Motif Jar by Magdalena Frimkess (INV# NP3997)
Located in Morton Grove, IL
Magdalena Suarez-Frimkess
Lidded Venice Beach Motif Jar (INV# NP3997)
stoneware, underglaze and glaze
6.5 x 5"
1981
signed by artist
provenance - The Nevica Project
Magdalena Suarez...
Category
1980s Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Stoneware, Glaze, Underglaze
Platter
Located in Kansas City, MO
Artist : Arnie Zimmerman
Title : Platter
Materials : Stoneware, glaze
Date : 1982
Dimensions : 22.75" x 23.5" x 4.5"
Description : Hand-signed and dated o...
Category
1980s Modern Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Glaze, Stoneware, Ceramic
Plate CR952-W
Located in Kansas City, MO
Peter Voulkos
Title: Plate CR952-W
Medium: Woodfired ceramic
Year: 1989
Signed and dated by the artist
Size: approx. 20.5 x 5 inches
A West Coast potter and sculptor, Peter Voulkos (1924-2002) led in the development of pottery as an art form. . With an MFA from California College of Arts and Crafts (1952), he taught at Black Mountain College (1953) where he was exposed to the avant-garde. In 1954, Voulkos moved to Los Angeles to become the chairman of a newly established ceramics department at the Los Angeles County Art Institute (later renamed the Otis Art Institute) and soon assembled a remarkable group of students: Paul Soldner, Jerry Rothman, Kenneth Price, John Mason, Henry Takemoto...
Category
1980s Post-Modern Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Ceramic
Wood Fired Platter
Located in Kansas City, MO
Wood Fired Platter
Material: Stoneware and woodfired
Year: 1989
Signed
Dimensions: 3 x 22 x 22"
Provenance - Charles Cowles Gallery, NYC
A West Coast potter and sculptor, Peter Voul...
Category
1980s Abstract Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Stoneware
Polkadot Wall Slab
By Jun Kaneko
Located in Morton Grove, IL
stoneware, underglaze, and glaze
Category
1980s Contemporary Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Stoneware, Glaze, Underglaze
Site for a Bowl I by Paula Winokur
By Paula Winokur
Located in Morton Grove, IL
porcelain, glaze
Category
1980s Contemporary Ceramic Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Porcelain, Glaze
Ceramic abstract sculptures for sale on 1stDibs.
Find a wide variety of authentic Ceramic abstract sculptures available on 1stDibs. While artists have worked in this medium across a range of time periods, art made with this material during the 21st Century is especially popular. If you’re looking to add Abstract sculptures created with this material to introduce a provocative pop of color and texture to an otherwise neutral space in your home, the works available on 1stDibs include elements of blue, purple, orange, yellow and other colors. There are many well-known artists whose body of work includes ceramic sculptures. Popular artists on 1stDibs associated with pieces like this include Tony Moore, Sara Fine-Wilson, Pablo Picasso, and Jane B. Grimm. Frequently made by artists working in the Contemporary, Abstract, all of these pieces for sale are unique and many will draw the attention of guests in your home. Not every interior allows for large Ceramic abstract sculptures, so small editions measuring 0.25 inches across are also available
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