This distinctive type of ceramic face vessel first appeared in the American South in the mid-1800s. Jugs such as these are attributed to a small number of black slaves working as potters in the ...
A ceramic jug found in Germantown, PA turns out to be an example of a significant 19th century protective relic and piece of art — a face jug — created by African American slaves and freedmen ...
Art Hounds recommend the ceramics exhibit “Garden Party,” “mOthertongue: Lived Experience in Asian America” and wood ...
Archaeologists found the upper brow of a face followed by two large eyes ... While dragon iconography is far from unique in Chinese architecture and art, a ceramic dragon head from this era is ...
Eyes are closed, face exhausted. She’s preparing the sculpture for a May show at the ... at the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts annual conference in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Bold color and big movement define the works in ceramic sculptor and Master’s of Fine Arts candidate Joe Taylor’s thesis exhibition, titled “Tenaciously Curious.” ...
She had briefly gone off track when she spied a small ceramic fragment nestled among rocks on a beach. "Usually I find [porcelain with] patterns, sometimes flowers … but this little face was ...