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Northwest Ceramics

Collection Info
Northwest Ceramics

The Pacific Northwest has long been a center for ceramic innovation. In the spring of 1951, arts patron Archie Bray turned an old brick factory in Helena, Montana, into a center for the ceramic arts and revolutionized the tradition in the Northwest. An important workshop at the Bray Foundation in 1952 with potters Shoji Hamada (1884–1978) and Bernard Leach (1887–1979) showed other Northwest potters clay’s potential as a medium beyond the functional.

The acclaimed ceramics program at the University of Washington also was launched in the 1950s and celebrated for innovations in figurative ceramics and for encouraging experimentation among its students. Its current faculty continue to play a pivotal role in the rapidly evolving field of contemporary ceramics.

This portfolio includes the works by Northwest ceramists in TAM's collection, both functional and sculptural forms.

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Bottle
Peter Voulkos
1953
Vessel
F. Carlton Ball
1964
Amazed
Patti Warashina
1984
Untitled (Sculptural Form)
Lucille Nutt
circa 1960s-1970s
Figure
George Tsutakawa
1959
Untitled
Rudy Autio
1961
Devil Walk
Howard Kottler
1987
Passages #1
John McCuistion
1998
Kiss a Cop
Erik Gronborg
circa 1970s
Big Ellie
Rudy Autio
1977
Three Wrestlers
Lloyd Arthur (Peter) Fortune
1973
Cain and Abel
Doug Jeck
2000
Swiss Miss
Howard Kottler
1973
Layed Back
Howard Kottler
1973
Island Pillows
Yuki Nakamura
2003
Yankee Yente's Pony Pelt
Howard Kottler
1967
Women
Diem Chau
2008
Waiting Lady #291
Saya Moriyasu
2007
Waiting Lady #283
Saya Moriyasu
2007