抖阴传媒在线

Skip to main content

New exhibit celebrates ceramics at CU 抖阴传媒在线

New exhibit celebrates ceramics at CU 抖阴传媒在线

Top image: Matthew McConnell, "Didn鈥檛 Miss a Thing," 2023, dark stoneware, twine and twist ties on steel panels, "Shaping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000鈥2020," CU Art Museum, Sept. 5鈥揇ec. 19, 2025. (Photo: Rachel Sauer; 漏 Matthew McConnell)

Opening Sept. 5 at the CU Art Museum, 鈥楽haping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000鈥2020鈥 focuses on themes including the environment, domesticity and rituals of home and material connections


The joy鈥攁nd sometimes frustration鈥攐f ceramics may be found in its contradictions: its fragile strength, its rough refinement, its elastic rigidity. Drop it and it might shatter, or it might survive millennia.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a material that鈥檚 about so much transformation,鈥 says Jeanne Quinn, a 抖阴传媒在线 professor of art and art history. 鈥淚t goes from being very plastic and malleable to something that鈥檚 more like stone. And embedded in ceramics is all kinds of material meaning. Our students who are trained in ceramics are really trained to dig into technical mastery with the material but also dig into how you find meaning in the material itself, how you鈥檙e using the material as metaphor.鈥

green ceramic birds on wall in art installation

Myers Berg Studios, United States,听鈥n plain sight, 2025, ceramic, maple,听"Shaping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000鈥2020," CU Art Museum, Sept. 5鈥揇ec.19, 2025. (Photo Rachel Sauer; 漏 Myers Berg Studios)

For students in the CU 抖阴传媒在线 ceramics program, the material also represents connection to an artistic lineage that has grown in breadth and renown through successive cohorts. It is a lineage nurtured by ceramics faculty Quinn, Scott Chamberlin and Kim Dickey, who have been teaching together and broadening the program for 25 years.

It is the length of those associations, in fact, that planted the seed of what has grown into the exhibit 鈥Shaping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000鈥2020,鈥 kicking off with an opening celebration Sept. 4 at the CU Art Museum and opening to the public Sept. 5.

鈥淐U has a really long history of investing in ceramics and having a very strong ceramics program,鈥 Quinn explains. 鈥淜im (Dickey) had this idea that it鈥檚 our silver anniversary of teaching together, we have this incredible group of alumni, so many amazing artists who have come through, as undergrads, as post-bacs and as grad students, so we should create an exhibit to celebrate that.鈥

A ceramic tradition

CU 抖阴传媒在线 has long championed the arts and supported artists, including ceramic artists who have created a student-focused program that prioritizes learning, technical mastery and artistic exploration. The ceramic program was significantly bolstered by Betty Woodman, an internationally renowned artist whose 2006 retrospective show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City was the first such show by a living female ceramicist, and who taught at CU 抖阴传媒在线 for 30 years.

Shaping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000鈥2020

What:The CU 抖阴传媒在线 ceramics program is celebrating its history with faculty Scott Chamberlin, Kim Dickey, and Jeanne Quinn. To honor the achievements of artists who graduated from this program, faculty curators are partnering with the CU Art Museum to present a retrospective exhibition.

When:Opening celebration Sept. 4 from 4鈥6 p.m.; exhibit opens to the public Sept. 5-Dec. 19. There will be an all-day symposium celebrating the exhibit Sept. 5.

Where: CU Art Museum

Learn more

Chamberlin was a colleague of Woodman, and Quinn was a student of both Woodman and Chamberlin before joining the ceramics faculty in 1997.

鈥淚n this program, there is a real commitment to ceramics and its incredibly rich history,鈥 Quinn says. 鈥淓very civilization from the beginning of time has had ceramics, so it鈥檚 an incredible kind of medium to work with and have the opportunity to reference all that. But I also feel like we have a very non-dogmatic approach to teaching鈥攖here鈥檚 so much history, but also so much space for experimentation and invention.

鈥淐eramics is a very demanding material. Anybody who鈥檚 ever sat down and tried to throw a pot on the wheel realizes oh, you don鈥檛 just toss this off. Every step requires real skill, real technical skill, but we鈥檝e worked to build a program where students receive this amazing education in learning how to learn and learning how to grapple with the material and how the material can offer so many different avenues of expression.鈥

, a post-baccalaureate student in the program between 2011 and 2013 and one of the exhibit鈥檚 30 featured artists, credits the ceramics program鈥檚 emphasis on exploration with helping her forge her path as an artist.

鈥淐eramics is always my first love, but the nice thing about this department is you鈥檙e encouraged to follow the idea and not just the material,鈥 Green says. 鈥淥ne of my professors in the program suggested I set clay to the side and focus on fiber and being more in tune with the material.鈥

Green鈥檚 work in the exhibit, 鈥淐alifornia King,鈥 centers on a bed covered in a blanket of knotted felt and wool-blend fibers. 鈥淚 work a lot in knots as a metaphor for mending and repair and healing.鈥

Artist , who earned an MFA in the ceramics program, created the quilted tapestry 鈥淢ije鈥 to include thousands of iridescent ceramic sequins鈥攂ringing together 鈥渢he spaces of brownness and听queerness in its sequined message,鈥 Aguirre explains. 鈥淭he term 鈥榤ije鈥 is a gender-neutral version of the often-used Spanish term of endearment 鈥榤ija,鈥 or daughter.鈥

In transforming 鈥渕ija鈥 into 鈥渕ije,鈥 Aguirre considers the 鈥渁ffective labor of navigating brownness as a queer subject. The piece responds to the way that intimacy is often gendered in Mexican and Latine spaces, leaving queer Latine bodies at once inside and outside.鈥

Erica Green assembles the knotted fiber components of artwork "California King"

Erica Green assembles her work "California King" (2022, knotted fibers on mattress) for the听"Shaping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000鈥2020" exhibit opening Sept. 5 at the CU Art Museum. (Photo Rachel Sauer; 漏 Erica Green)

鈥榊ou can do anything with clay鈥

Quinn emphasizes that even though the exhibit celebrates the ceramics program, it also includes textiles, video works, photography, live performances and other media. 鈥(The exhibit) runs the gamut of materials, but the unifying piece is that you can see that sense of commitment to the craft, to really handling a material with authority and also expressing something beyond the material.鈥

The hardest part, she adds, was choosing exhibit participants 鈥渂ecause we鈥檙e in touch with all of these alumni, we鈥檙e following what they鈥檙e doing, they鈥檙e sending us updates.鈥

At the same time the exhibit participants were being chosen, Quinn and her colleagues were working with CU Art Museum staff to envision and plan the exhibit鈥攁 time-intensive but rewarding process, says Hope Saska, CU Art Museum acting director. Saska also partnered with Quinn, Dickey and Chamberlin to organize an all-day symposium September 5 celebrating the exhibit; it will include performances, conversations and in-gallery artist talks.

鈥淵ou say ceramics and people have this idea of, 鈥極h, you鈥檙e making pots on the wheel,鈥欌 Quinn says. 鈥淎nd ceramics certainly fits in this kind of lane, that is absolutely part of what we teach. But you also have an artist like , who made thousands of ceramic beads and then strung them together into this gorgeous textile piece that hangs on a wall. Casey has taken ceramics, which you might think of as fixed and static, and then created this piece that hangs and moves and is as much a textile as it is ceramics.

鈥淪o, we want people to come to the exhibit, and especially we want students to think, 鈥極h, you can do anything with clay.鈥欌

word "mije" sewn in ceramic sequins on black fabric

Lucero Aguirre,听mije, 2024, handmade and lustered ceramic sequins, thread and batting and fabric,听"Shaping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000鈥2020," CU Art Museum, Sept. 5鈥揇ec. 19, 2025. (Photo: Rachel Sauer; 漏 Lucero Aguirre)

green and pink purse-shaped art piece

Linda Nguyen Lopez, United States (1981),听Gummy Worm, Ombre Dust Furry, 2021, porcelain,听"Shaping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000鈥2020," CU Art Museum, Sept. 5鈥揇ec. 19, 2025. (Photo: Rachel Sauer, 漏 Linda Nguyen Lopez)

long-necked ceramic vessel with gold handle and textured floral design

Joanna Powell, United States (1981),听Flower Vessel no. 1, 2019, earthenware, majolica, gold luster,听"Shaping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000鈥2020," CU Art Museum, Sept. 5鈥揇ec. 19, 2025. (Photo Rachel Sauer; 漏 Joanna Powell)

mosaic of woman with dark hair made from clay tile

Sandra Trujillo, United States (1967),听Mosaic - Yellow, 2024, Mexican Smalti (glass), Wedi (polystyrene board), wood, steel, "Shaping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000鈥2020," CU Art Museum, Sept. 5鈥揇ec. 19, 2025. (Photo: Rachel Sauer; 漏 Sandra Trujillo)

video screen showing woman wearing black clothes and digging in the woods

Julie Poitras Santos, United States (1967),听The Conversation, 2019, single channel video,听"Shaping Time: CU Ceramics Alumni 2000鈥2020," CU Art Museum, Sept. 5鈥揇ec. 19, 2025. (Photo: Rachel Sauer; 漏 Julie Poitras Santos)


Did you enjoy this article?听听Passionate about art and art history?听