Ceramics: Art and Perception

SUGRU–ING your ceramics

ude Pullen began his fascination with clay when reconditioning his high school’s dilapidated Ceramics Department during his A-Levels. It took days to clean out sumps, sieve discarded tea-bags and pencils out of old clay, dry it, pug it and reconstitute it – alongside fixing the old potter’s wheel. Safe to say, having to start from scratch gave him a genuine appreciation for the material. Mostly self-taught, Jude kept this interest going while studying Chemistry, which in turn gave him a molecular appreciation for how glazes worked. He subsequently trained in Product Design Engineering, a discipline which encouraged the harmony between science and art.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Ceramics: Art and Perception

Ceramics: Art and Perception4 min read
Listening to Clay: Conversations with Contemporary Japanese Ceramic Artists
This is an indispensable book. For anyone interested in contemporary Japanese ceramics it offers an indepth look at the setting and the players through interviews with artists and dealers. Traditions, training, new ideas and opportunities are disclos
Ceramics: Art and Perception6 min read
Gathering the Nimbus
Shuo Chen, a contemporary ceramic artist from Fujian Province in east China, grew up steeped in the spirituality of traditional Chinese art. His disciplined creative practice and rigorous self-criticism have helped him break the shackles of these con
Ceramics: Art and Perception6 min read
My Grandfather’s Marbles
My grandfather John Wilbur Carr grew up in Jefferson County, Pennsylvania in the town of Punxsutawney. His ancestors settled in Western Pennsylvania after the Wyoming Valley Massacre of 1778 forced them from the farm they had, near the present-day Na

Related Books & Audiobooks