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  2. Pottery Alley invites beginners with 'Wheel for Dummies' class

    www.aol.com/pottery-alley-invites-beginners...

    Pottery Alley of Lafayette, at 2605 Johnston St., offers classes, workshops and parties for all ages. It opened in 2007 and became one of the area's premiere retreats for clay artists, from ...

  3. This L.A. ceramist's vessels offer joy in uncertain times ...

    www.aol.com/news/l-ceramists-vessels-offer-joy...

    L.A. ceramist Linda Hsiao's hand-built vessels — owls, birds and mythological creatures — exhibit a playful style that is thoroughly her own.

  4. Tammy Garcia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tammy_Garcia

    2008 "Beyond Tradition: The Pueblo Pottery of Tammy Garcia", National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC; 2008 Heart of the West Art Exhibition, National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame, Fort Worth, TX; 2008 Blue Rain Gallery, "Visions in Glass II" with Preston Singletary, Santa Fe, NM

  5. Gwen Lux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwen_Lux

    Gwen Wickerts was born on November 17, 1908, in Chicago, Illinois. [4]She began her art studies in Detroit at age 14, taking classes with potter, Mary Chase Perry Stratton at Pewabic Pottery. [5]

  6. Overbeck Sisters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overbeck_Sisters

    The Overbeck sisters (Margaret, Hannah, Elizabeth, and Mary Frances) were American women potters and artists of the Arts and Crafts Movement who established Overbeck Pottery in their Cambridge City, Indiana, home in 1911 with the goal of producing original, high-quality, hand-wrought ceramics as their primary source of income.

  7. Karen LaMonte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen_LaMonte

    LaMonte's first dress sculpture, Vestige (2000), is an influential work of cast glass. It was described by Habatat Galleries as a “glass sculpture that changed the course of art history.” [13] Vestige depicts a life-sized woman's dress, from which the wearer is absent. This sculpture and LaMonte's related works have received international ...

  8. Paul Revere Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Revere_Pottery

    Vase, ca. 1911, Paul Revere Pottery. Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Paul Revere Pottery was a woman-run American art pottery founded during the Progressive Era in Boston, Massachusetts in the United States. It emerged as a subgroup of the Saturday Evening Girls Club (S.E.G.).

  9. Greek terracotta figurines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_terracotta_figurines

    Similar representations are also found in tombs. These figurines are of variable size, perhaps to indicate the age of the dead child. Their habit was to bury the dead accompanied by objects of daily custom: jewels, combs, figurines for the women; weapons and strigils for the men; figurines and toys for the children. Figurines were often ...