“Influences: Japanese Aesthetics and Teachers College Ceramics” Exhibition

The Nippon Gallery

poster for “Influences: Japanese Aesthetics and Teachers College Ceramics” Exhibition

This event has ended.

Organizes by The Nippon Club
In cooperation with Teachers College, Columbia University
Curated by Tomas Lollar and Aimée Ehrman


The Teachers College, Columbia University program is one of the oldest ceramics studios in New York City, with a distinguished history going back to the late 19th Century. The works on display seek to pay tribute and highlight the connection to the great heritage of Japanese ceramic art.

It was a fortunate coincidence that, Bernard Leach, the English potter, met Shoji Hamada while in Japan in 1909-1920. Hamada’s pottery possessed a natural spontaneity and aesthetic connection to folk traditions in the clay medium. A deep friendship developed between the two and Hamada spent time in England. This was at a time when mass made, factory produced pottery was omnipresent in everyday life. The teachings of Hamada and Leach brought many followers interested in the evidence of the human hand in creating pottery.

Leach returned to England and revived Japanese folk techniques and those of English hand-made traditions of the past. A number of American potters were influenced by Leach and sought to revive folk traditions in this country. The Japanese stoneware pottery was fired at a high temperature (1300C) allowing for richness of color. From approximately 1950 onward, American ceramic studios at colleges and universities had the capacity for high temperature, gas-fired kilns. Prior to this time, most ceramic works were earthenware and fired at lower temperatures.

The influence of the Japanese aesthetic is both direct and indirect. It can be seen through the works of exhibiting artists such as Robert Barone and Stephen Borow, in their high-fired, iron spot surface decoration, akin to Hamada and Leach. Or it can be experienced in the works by other exhibiting artists such as Joan Bell and Aimee Ehrman who embrace the idea of the beautifully imperfect and find inspiration within nature and personal experience. 

We hope that you will find the pieces on display engaging and showing the pottery connection between our cultures.

Exhibiting Artists

Ricardo Arango
Robert Barone
Joan Bell
Stephen Borow
Tina Durant
Bruce Edelstein
Aimee Ehrman
Barbara Halston
Bonnie Levine
Thomas Lollar
Martha Rayner
Reuben Sinha
Watuza Vidal

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Schedule

from February 13, 2020 to February 26, 2020

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