



Marble Moth.
Stoneware, fabric.
10 x 11 x 7.5 in / 25 x 28 x 19 cm.
Made in Alfred, NY in 2017.





Marble Moth.
Stoneware, fabric.
10 x 11 x 7.5 in / 25 x 28 x 19 cm.
Made in Alfred, NY in 2017.


Chorographic Commission Vessel (Two Joined Figures).
Wood-fired and then oxidized earthenware.
7-1/2 x 5-1/4 x 5-1/4 in / 18 x 12 x 12 cm and other sizes.
Made in Colombia in 2016.

Detail of Chorographic Commission Vessel (Shaman).
Wood-fired and then oxidized earthenware.
6-3/4 x 5 x 5 in / 15 x 12 x 12 cm.
Made in Colombia in 2016.
In 1850, the young Republic of New Granada or what is today Colombia, developed a project known as the Chorographic Commission to survey the territory and its provinces in order to promote commerce, foreign investment and immigration. Scientists, writers and artists partook in the process and produced detailed descriptions and renderings of the landscapes, people, trades and resources of the New Granada. The sources of the drawings on this series of vessels are watercolors of indigenous idols made by Henri Price in 1852 for Chorographic Commission.
The hand-thrown forms were inspired by the simplicity of local traditional vessels. A very simple line drawing made with a combination of oxides was applied with a fine brush and then partially covered with industrial white glaze. The effect is similar to that of previous works on paper where a partially covered line drawing shows through a white overcoat.



Madre de Agua Fountain.
Wood-fired earthenware, partially glazed, copper pipes.
19-1/2 x 19-1/2 x 19 in / 49 x 49 x 48 cm.
Made in Colombia in 2016.
This fountain was built for the nineteenth century coffee hacienda at Campos de Gutiérrez and it signals whether the crops have proper irrigation. Madre de Agua [Mother of Water] is a Colombian myth about a wandering entity that lures children astray and towards the water. According to the myth, her feet are bent backwards, misleading anybody who tries to track her footsteps when a child goes missing.
Made in situ, the fountain was built with clay sourced in the homestead with no additives. The glaze was also made from local materials. The motifs feature Quimbaya figures and endemic fauna and flora, including the Farlowella Yarigui fish discovered in 2015.
Legend tells Madre de Agua is the spirit of a white Creole girl who fell in love with a Chibchan cacique. The cacique was captured and held hostage by her father during a raid for gold. Indignant by her father’s cruelty, she helped the chief escape and followed him to a secret village of his domain. She learned Chibcha and gained power and influence as she gave birth to the only child of the cacique. This was short-lived however because a traitor woman of the tribe, impelled by jealousy, informed outsiders of their whereabouts. The tribe was ambushed, the chief was gruesomely executed and the mestizo newborn was flung into a river from the heights of a waterfall. The mother jumped after the child mangling her body on the rocks and becoming part of the river.





Yellow Nymph.
Stoneware, fabric.
9.5 x 10 x 7 in / 24 x 25 x 18 cm.
Made in Alfred, NY in 2017.