Marek Cecula, The Porcelain Carpet, 2002, porcelain and digital decals, the MFAH, Garth Clark and Mark Del Vecchio Collection, museum purchase with funds provided by the Caroline Wiess Law Accessions Endowment Fund. © Marek Cecula
Presented by artist Marek Cecula, founder of Modus Design and former head and coordinator of the ceramics department at Parsons School of Design, New York (1983–2004)
Ceramics is no longer a field monopolized by potters and ceramists; a new generation of artists and designers is broadening the ceramics vocabulary. Technological advances have made it possible to coat clay with synthetic substances, cut it with precision, form it into complex 3-D models, and decorate it with computerized digital decals. Today, clay has become an adaptable and versatile medium for a wide range of applications, and an important player in contemporary artistic practice.
Polish-born artist Marek Cecula creates ceramic sculptures that challenge established conventions of making and materiality. “I am seduced by the role ceramic plays in our lives and the aesthetic values it carries. I am a watcher, an anthropologist, who is constantly discovering how we form relationships with these objects and their functions.” Cecula’s artistic practice has also evolved into Modus Design, a firm that produces domestic wares in both limited and mass-produced quantities, focusing on the “landscape of the table, and reinventing the conventional in contemporary ceramics.”
In this talk, Cecula explores the exciting new developments in the field of contemporary ceramics, and shares his own experiences with this unique material.
This lecture is open to the public and offered in conjunction with the exhibition Shifting Paradigms in Contemporary Ceramics: The Garth Clark and Mark Del Vecchio Collection.
Admission is free. A reception to meet the speaker follows.
For related Spotlight Gallery Talks in May, click here.