• About us
  • Magazine
  • Submissions
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Thursday, May 22, 2025
No Result
View All Result
Ceramics Now
Subscribe now
  • News
  • Artist profiles
  • Articles
  • Exhibitions
  • Ceramic art
  • Interviews
  • Resources
    • Ceramics Now Weekly
    • 2025 Ceramics Calendar
    • Ceramics job board
    • Pottery classes
Ceramics Now
  • News
  • Artist profiles
  • Articles
  • Exhibitions
  • Ceramic art
  • Interviews
  • Resources
    • Ceramics Now Weekly
    • 2025 Ceramics Calendar
    • Ceramics job board
    • Pottery classes
No Result
View All Result
Ceramics Now
Home Exhibitions

John Shea: standard, abstract at HB381 Gallery, New York

February 4, 2023
in Exhibitions
Carped
Carped
Carped
Crumbs
Crumbs
Crumbs
Cypress
Cypress
Cypress
Fogged I
Fogged I
Fogged I
Fogged II
Fogged II
Fogged II
Leaner
Leaner
Leaner
Specter
Specter
Specter

John Shea: standard, abstract is on view at HB381 Gallery, New York

January 13 – February 25, 2023

HB381 is pleased to announce standard, abstract, a solo exhibition of John Shea’s latest body of work.

John Shea’s practice belongs with equal comfort to pottery, painting, sculpture, and installation art and yet—a free radical—it belongs exclusively to no one camp. Instead, the work lives confidently in a world of in-betweens. The result feels nuanced, self-nurturing, and balanced. In a world suffering from extremes and tribalism, Shea’s formalism dwells happily in the middle.

Starting from a shaped, wooden base, the artist hand builds his forms by pinching together small balls of clay. Some surfaces are then burnished smooth as flat planes and others left lumpy and rounded, but neither is too perfectly so. These ceramic sculptures are both muscularly abstract and evoke their own delicate elements, such as silica crystals, viewed through an electron microscope. They are both parts and the sum of their parts.

With off-kilter shades that include raspberry, yellow-orange, dusty green, and bluish-purple, the artist’s color palette comes from A Dictionary of Color Combinations by Japanese painter Sanzo Wada, a book that first appeared in 1932. Here, too, Shea shows his consensus building nature—he avoids pure primary colors, and instead mixes colors to create secondaries and tertiaries. These muted colors play well with each other, becoming an interdependent, mutual admiration society of color that fills a room. The palette’s in-between-ness is calming—nothing shouts or demands attention. Yet these colors pique the brain’s pleasure center.

Shea layers one color on top of another with spray gun and drip techniques. One color peeks through another’s veil at times, creating yet another shade. The technique is similar to glazing in painting, where layers of translucent oils shine through each other from murky depths. And note, Shea’s colored surfaces are oil-based enamels rather than ceramic glazes. This is where his work tips into the realm of painting quite comfortably. In fact, walking around his sculptures feels like experiencing painting in a new way—as a horizontally splayed-out installation of bobbing color, rather than a dense, vertical painted surface.

In a recent exhibition, Shea created a clearly demarcated, rectangular island of sculpture. His landscape of pedestals of different heights was built from Oriented Strand Board, or OSB. Similar to particle board, this woody material has a variegated surface. Again, Shea avoided purities like flat white pedestals, and the light-colored wood spoke the right dialect of in between-ness as the sculptures. The result of the two together was harmonious and calm.

The conversational nature of Shea’s works is due, in part, to such placement on a construction-worker’s Acropolis. And like a group of students learning through the Socratic method, his colorful sculptures stand in dialogue with each other, each interrogating the nature of objectness. Or rather, thingness. Because Shea is interested in Bill Brown’s concept of “Thing Theory.” Put into too brief words, an object has a known purpose and fulfills it, but once it breaks down in some way and its usefulness is compromised, it becomes a thing. Are Shea’s forms objects or things? Has he broken down neat categories of painting, sculpture, and ceramics in way that turn his works into things? What was the original purpose to be broken down and who was the end user?

This work’s satisfying complexity comes from layers of interrelationships. Not only do these sculptures’ tiny parts speak to their whole outward selves, but their colors blend into mixtures of togetherness, and the sculptures play among each other with delight. They are a geography around which viewers move, and as they do, visual relationships playfully shift and change. Shea’s colors and forms need one another and yet, made in a studio by the same hands, his ceramic sculptures are independent beings who will carry the knowledge of each other into the world.

Essay by Catherine Walworth, Jackye and Curtis Finch Jr., Curator of Drawings, Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts

John Shea (American, b. 1989) is a ceramic artist currently based in Little Rock, Arkansas. Shea holds a BFA from the School of American Crafts at the Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, NY, as well as an MA and MFA from the University of Wisconsin in Madison. He has been a resident artist at the University of Montevallo, AL, a Visiting Lecturer at Hamilton College in Clinton, NY, and is currently a Resident Artist and Instructor at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Shea’s work has been exhibited throughout the United States and internationally, including a recent solo exhibition at the Manners/Pappas Gallery, University of Arkansas- Little Rock.

Contact
info@hb381gallery.com

HB381 Gallery
381 Broadway
New York, NY 10013
United States

Photos by Joe Kramm

Visit John Shea’s profile on Ceramics Now.

Tags: HB381 GalleryJohn SheaNew York

Related Posts

Alive & Unfolding ceramics exhibition
Exhibitions

Alive & Unfolding contemporary ceramics exhibition opens this week at Le Delta, Namur

May 13, 2025
Yanagihara Mutsuo ceramics
Exhibitions

Breathing Vessels: Contemporary ceramics by Yanagihara Mutsuo at Dai Ichi Arts, New York

May 13, 2025
made in Jingdezhen
Exhibitions

made in Jingdezhen at Axel Obiger, Berlin

May 12, 2025
Katie Spragg at Ruup & Form
Exhibitions

Katie Spragg: The Fragmented Landscape at Ruup & Form, London

May 9, 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *



Latest Artist Profiles

Alice Shields ceramic artist
Artists

Alice Shields

April 28, 2025
Yuriy Musatov ceramics
Artists

Yuriy Musatov

April 23, 2025
Philsoo Heo ceramics
Artists

Philsoo Heo

April 15, 2025
Hanna Miadzvedzeva ceramic artist
Artists

Hanna Miadzvedzeva

April 11, 2025

Latest Articles

Anne Laure Cano and Jim Gladwin
Interviews

Translate: L’Ofici Ceramista – Two artists, a defunct factory, a museum and an archive

by Ceramics Now
May 8, 2025
The Whole World In Our Hands
Articles

The Whole World In Our Hands at The Stephen Lawrence Gallery

by Ceramics Now
May 6, 2025
Tontouristen Kollectiv
Articles

Tontouristen Kollektiv: What can be found in the gap between the different clay narratives?

by Ceramics Now
April 28, 2025
Sharif Farrag ceramics
Articles

Sharif Farrag: Hybrid Moments at Jeffrey Deitch

by Ceramics Now
April 16, 2025
Instagram Facebook LinkedIn
Ceramics Now

Ceramics Now is a leading independent art publication specialized in contemporary ceramics. Since 2010, we promote and document contemporary ceramic art and empower artists working with ceramics.

Pages

  • About us
  • Magazine
  • Submissions
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Subscribe to Ceramics Now Magazine

Join a vibrant community of over 21,000 readers and gain access to in-depth articles, essays, reviews, exclusive news, and critical reflections on contemporary ceramics.

SUBSCRIBE TODAY

© 2010-2025 Ceramics Now - Inspiring the next generation of ceramic artists.

  • Subscribe to Ceramics Now
  • News
  • Artist profiles
  • Articles
  • Exhibitions
  • Ceramic art
  • Interviews
  • Resources
    • Ceramics Now Weekly
    • Ceramics Calendar 2025
    • Ceramics job board
    • Pottery classes
  • About us
    • Ceramics Now Magazine
    • Submissions
    • Advertise with Ceramics Now
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result

© 2010-2025 Ceramics Now - Inspiring the next generation of ceramic artists.