Skip to main content
1 of 1

Ursula Morley Price
Brown Flange Twist Bottle Form

2013

You May Also Like
  • Rise Studies
    Located in Santa Monica, CA
    Set of Three miniature ceramic stoneware sculptures, glazed, each featuring a different repeating abstract form. Each figure is approximately 2" x 2"
    Category

    2010s Abstract Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Ceramic, Stoneware

    Rise Studies
    $320 Sale Price
    20% Off
  • "PLUG-N-PLAY I", stoneware glazed sculpture, green, yellow, blue, white, wheel
    By Andrew Cornell Robinson
    Located in Toronto, Ontario
    "PLUG-N-PLAY I (Yellow, Black and White)", 2019, in wheel-formed stoneware, glaze, stain and cork by artist Andrew Cornell Robinson, is one of ...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Stoneware, Glaze

  • Oval bowl with tree motif. 2013, stone ware, 3, 5x26x18, 5 cm
    Located in Riga, LV
    Oval bowl with tree motif 2013, stone ware, 3,5x26x18,5 cm
    Category

    2010s Abstract More Art

    Materials

    Stoneware

  • Gemini Headspace
    Located in East Quogue, NY
    Yellow, blue and white round abstract ceramic sculpture titled "Gemini Headspace" by Lauren Skelly Bailey. Glazed porcelain with cobalt. Size: 7 x...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Ceramic, Porcelain, Stoneware, Slip, Glaze

  • "Large Vessel" - abstract sculpture - Barbara Hepworth
    By Susan Hable
    Located in Atlanta, GA
    Susan Hable is inspired by the work of David Hockney, Milton Avery, Henri Matisse, Alex Katz, Howard Hodgkins, Hilma af Klint, Georgia O'Keeffe, Barbara Hepworth and Constantin Brâncuși. With humor and a bit of mischief, Susan Hable’s “Don't Pick The Flowers!” is a body of work that is at once a refuge and a playground. Inspired by her sumptuous garden just outside of her Athens studio, Susan flows from one medium to the next from painting to collage to sculpture. Susan sees her garden as a place for adventure and daydreaming, challenging her perceptions of what her Art can be. Even a weedy ground cover has caught Susan’s eye, an overlooked invasive is seen in a new light becoming a dreamlike fairytale path. Her work asks us to engage in life, go for a walk and play. Susan Hable Smith is the artist and designer behind the boldly colored and hand drawn patterns of Hable Construction...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Stoneware

  • John Glick Plum Street Pottery Glazed Bowl Reduction Fired
    Located in Detroit, MI
    "Untitled" is a stoneware piece with the decorative layer of the rich toned glazes and markings that John was so well-known for. Each piece that John produced was unique. The lip on this piece is slightly scalloped and the shape is removed from the boring circular to mimic a gentle geometric design. He was seduced by the effects of the reduction kiln, which decreased the levels of oxygen during firing, inducing the flame to pull oxygen out of the clay and glazes changing the colors of the glazes depending on their iron and copper content. In this way he achieved the rich gradients of ochre and umber and variations in stippling and opacity. This piece is signed and stamped on the bottom. John was an American Abstract Expressionist ceramicist born in Detroit, MI. Though open to artistic experimentation, Glick was most influenced by the styles and aesthetics of Asian pottery—an inspiration that shows in his use of decorative patterns and glaze choices. He has said that he is attracted to simplicity, as well as complexity: my work continually reflects my re-examination that these two poles can coexist… or not, in a given series. Glick also took influences from master potters of Japan, notably Shoji Hamada and Kanjrio Kawai, blending their gestural embellishments of simple forms with attitudes of Abstract Expressionism. He was particularly drown to the work of Helen Frankenthaler whose soak-stain style resonated with Glick’s multi-layered glaze surfaces, which juxtaposed veils of atmospheric color with gestural marks and pattern. He spent countless hours developing and making his own tools in order to achieve previously unseen results in his work with clay and glaze. Glick’s “Plum Tree Pottery...
    Category

    1970s American Modern Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Stoneware, Glaze

Recently Viewed

View All