Showing 506 items
matching ceramic art
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Darebin Art Collection
Heather Stirling, Blue Ottoman Bird, 2012
Framed ceramicottoman -
Hymettus Cottage & Garden Ballarat
Ceramic - Plate, Begonia Festival Souvenir Plate, 1994
These plates were produced by Ballarat potter John Gilbert at his Old Ballarat pottery in Mt Clear in 1994. Gilbert established two potteries in Ballarat , the Edinburgh Pottery at Sovereign Hill Historical village and the Old Ballarat Pottery. Gilbert studied art at the School of Mines Ballarat, now Federation University and went on to lecture there. Notable for his studio pottery these plates were more a commercial production and were among the later products from the Old Ballarat Pottery before it closed in 1994.Small stoneware plate transfer printed with "Ballarat Begonia Fesival 40th Anniversary around rim and colour print of Begonias in centre.label to the underside with printed with Old Ballarat Pottery around poppet head logo and a second triangular Made in Australia sticker. -
Hymettus Cottage & Garden Ballarat
Ceramic - Plate, Persian Style design plate, 1890s
Created by William de Morgan & Co c.1890 and painted by Charles Passenger this small plate is an example of the Persian Ware produced by De Morgan.Arts & Crafts movement 1880sA stylised duck central surrounded by a carnation pattern.WDE.MORGAN & CO in painted in black with CP all in blue and turquoise concentric circles on verso.charles passenger, pottery, earthenware, arts and crafts, william morris -
Wyndham Art Gallery (Wyndham City Council)
Sculpture, Nandita Nadkarni, Crafted Clay Odyssey, 2023
Winner Wyndham Art Prize LEAP Award 2023 -
Darebin Art Collection
Sculpture, Helen Bodycomb, Chris Rak & Enver Camdal, Westgarth precinct public art, 1998
Installed in the Westgarth Shopping Strip, the artworks include aerial, street level and inlaid pieces. The aerial installations consist of eight pairs of steel dragonfly wings. The street level series feature ten sculptural pieces of welded steel depicting enlarged body/skeletal parts of fauna that are indigenous to the area. The inlaid artworks are a series of stainless steel mosaic in the pavement.Five pairs of steel dragonfly wings mounted on eight painted PTC power poles. Ten sculptures of welded steel depicting enlarged body / skeletal parts of fauna that are indigenous to the area. These also function as bicycle racks. A series of stainless steel, ceramic and glass mosaic inlays. -
Darebin Art Collection
Ceramic - Premier Pottery, Premier Pottery, Earthenware 'Remued' barrel-shaped vase, dark green / blue, 1934-1940; c.1935
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Darebin Art Collection
Ceramic - Premier Pottery, Premier Pottery, Earthenware 'Remued' baluster-shaped vase, green / beige / brown / blue, 1934-1940
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Darebin Art Collection
Ceramic - Premier Pottery, Premier Pottery, Earthenware 'Remued' baluster-shaped vase, dark green / brown / blue, 1941-1955
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Darebin Art Collection
Ceramic - Premier Pottery, Premier Pottery, Earthenware 'Remued' barrel-shaped jardinaire, pale green / beige / pale blue, 1941-1955
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Darebin Art Collection
Ceramic - Premier Pottery, Premier Pottery, Earthenware 'Remued' baluster-shaped vase, green / brown / blue, 1941-1955
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Darebin Art Collection
Ceramic - Premier Pottery, Premier Pottery, Earthenware 'Remued' globe-shaped bowl, brown / blue, 1941-1955
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Darebin Art Collection
Ceramic - Premier Pottery, Premier Pottery, Earthenware 'Remued' cylinder vase, green / beige / blue, 1941-1955
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Darebin Art Collection
Ceramic - Premier Pottery, Premier Pottery, Earthenware 'Remued' wall pocket vase, green / brown, 1941-1955
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Darebin Art Collection
Ceramic - Premier Pottery, Premier Pottery, Earthenware 'Remued' egg-cup vase, green / brown, 1941-1955
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Melbourne Tram Museum
Newspaper, The Age, "Hit by a bureaucrat's tram", 15/07/1992 12:00:00 AM
Newspaper clipping, The Age 15/7/1992, titled "Hit by a bureaucrat's tram", written by Kevin Childs, photo Angela Wylie, about Phil Pinder, an artist who created ceramic models of the Transporting Art trams. Who was displaying and selling them. This breached copyright, advised by the Ministry of Arts.trams, tramways, transporting art, copyright, models -
Federation University Art Collection
Ceramic, Sarah Canham, #Fliporflop 1, 2 & 3, 2021
'Home' is a symbol of hopes, dreams, comfort, love, family and future. It is both a place and an idea, nor does it remain in time and space. It can also represent a time of sadness , fear and loss. Through the roller-coaster of the past year, I have used a series of homes belonging to family and friends. Each artwork of home tells a different story about its occupants, their story, and what home mean to them. Sarah CANHAM Sarah has had a life-long love of creative arts and a passion for nature she has pursued in her career. She has a Bachelor Applied Science degree from Charles Sturt University, a Masters of Environment from University of Melbourne, and works in natural resource management and conservation. Studying part time Sarah Canham completed a Bachelor of Visual Arts at Federation University Arts Academy in 2021. Her art is an expression of the awe she has for the natural world, and concerns for the future, including for our indigenous culture, and native flora and fauna in Australia. She also reflects on the current and past women and mother artists who have experienced the challenge of juggling art, career and motherhood, and have been under-represented in the arts community for millennia.Three handbuilt, slab construction, stoneware formsceramics, sarah canham, dvc art award, alumni -
Federation University Art Collection
Ceramic - Artwork - Ceramic, Reeves, Dianne*, "Show Your Claws" by Dianne Reeves, 1996 c
This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 1000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.Ceramic plate, boxed to enable it to be displayed on a wall. art, artwork, dianne reeves, ceramics, available -
Merri-bek City Council
Ceramic - Ceramic, acrylic paint, gold lustre and mix media, Bundit Puangthong et al, FLESH, 2018
... is recognised as a leader in Australian ceramic art. His work is held ...In creating these pieces, Vipoo Srivilasa initiated the process by sculpting three figures with bare surfaces. Bundit Puangthong then added his artistic touch by painting each sculpture. The artists' conceptual visions harmonized perfectly, especially considering their shared commitment to Buddhist principles, which frequently inspire their respective artistic practices. After Bundit completed his painting, Vipoo enlivened the pieces by adding eyes to the figures. He also embellished the works with pom-poms, lending them a softness that makes them appear both approachable and innocent, despite the weightiness of their themes. Each sculpture embodies a specific teaching from Buddhism: "FLESH" features a golden umbrella, serving as a metaphor for sex. -
Merri-bek City Council
Ceramic - Ceramic, acrylic paint, gold lustre and mix media, Bundit Puangthong et al, FOOD, 2018
... is recognised as a leader in Australian ceramic art. His work is held ...These captivating pieces are part of a series called "FOOD / FLESH / FAME," a collaborative effort between Melbourne-based Thai artists Bundit Puangthong and Vipoo Srivilasa. Drawing from Buddhist teachings, the series explores the three elements of attachment: Food (consumption), Flesh (sex), and Fame (power). Although these elements are known to cause suffering, they remain persistently alluring, a paradox that the artists intend to explore further in the future. In creating these pieces, Vipoo Srivilasa initiated the process by sculpting three figures with bare surfaces. Bundit Puangthong then added his artistic touch by painting each sculpture. The artists' conceptual visions harmonized perfectly, especially considering their shared commitment to Buddhist principles, which frequently inspire their respective artistic practices. After Bundit completed his painting, Vipoo enlivened the pieces by adding eyes to the figures. He also embellished the works with pom-poms, lending them a softness that makes them appear both approachable and innocent, despite the weightiness of their themes. Each sculpture embodies a specific teaching from Buddhism: "FOOD" depicts a durian, the king of fruits, painted by Bundit Puangthong. He notes, "Despite its pungent aroma, many people still love to eat it."Donated the by the artists -
Federation University Art Collection
Ceramic - Ceramics, [Untitled]
... This item is part of the Federation University Art ...This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 1000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.art, artwork -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Ceramic - Madonna and Child, Viola Ayling
Viola Annie Ayling (1911-1990), was born in Korumburra. After her marriage to William John Ayling in 1932 she moved with her husband to Tennyson Street [Kew]. A professional tailoress, Viola Ayling was also a talented amateur potter. She created her ceramics at her home at 128 Pakington Street [Kew], where she had an internal studio and a handmade, wood-fired brick kiln in her backyard. This pot is part of a collection of 15 glazed ceramic functional and decorative items donated by her granddaughter to the collection in 2024. A handmade, abstract figurative sculpture, expertly potted and glazed. The style is representative of Australian ceramic design of the period, particularly that employed by Klytie Peyte.Handmade ceramic sculpture of an abstracted Madonna and Child. The figures are fully covered in an olive green glaze.Signature to base: "V. Ayling"ceramics, pakington street -- kew (vic.), sculptures, abstract art, viola ayling -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph - ceramics, Nintingbool Potteries, Bottle by Nintingbool Potteries
Stephen Drew was Nintingbool Potteries Stephen (Steve) Drew studied at the Ballarat Technical Art School (a division of the Ballarat School of Mines) and RMIT. He worked as a secondary school teacher for a short time before setting up Nintingbool Potteries in a bush setting at Smythes Creek, near Ballarat, in 1974. He made a wide range of functional pottery high-fired in stoneware and porcelain, later concentrating on one-off sculptural pieces. Steve Drew was instrumental in setting up the Ballarat Ceramic Group, which operated for twenty years, and is a member of the Golden Plains Art Trail. His pottery mark is recorded as an impressed 'N' in a circle, or an incised 'Drew'. Bell shaped bottle by Nintingbool Potteriesaustralian studio pottery, ceramics, bottle, steve drew, stephen drew, nintingbool potteries, ballarat pottery group -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Ceramic, 1991
Graham MASTERS, Sweenies Creek Pottery Potter Graham Masters was based at Sweenies Creek outside Bendigo. He specialised in a patented technique of low relief stoneware depicting Australian animals and landscapes. He obtained a Diploma of Art and Design in Ceramics from the Bendigo Institute of Technology in 1973, then operated a pottery for a year in Bendigo before becoming an employee, then a partner at Maldon Pottery with Neville Wilson and Thomas Metcalf. Masters left Maldon to set up his own pottery at Sweenies Creek in 1984. A stoneware plate commemorating the 125th anniversary of the Shire of Strathfieldsaye. It features the Shire Hall and courthouse, with gum trees to the left.graham masters, sweenies creek pottery, shire of strathfieldsaye, strahfieldsaye shire hall, anniversary -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Ceramic - Ceramics, Garry Bish, Plate by Garry Bish, c2023
Garry BISH (1950- ) Born Charlton, Victoria After training as a secondary school art teacher in Melbourne in 1968-69, Gary Bish moved to Bendigo, where he established the Potters Arms Studio in Epsom in 1972 while studying for a Diploma of Art and Design in ceramics at the Bendigo Institute of Technology, graduating in 1974. Establishing an independent studio in Epsom in 1972, Garry Bish has lectured in Ceramics for many years. Bish marks his work with his signature or an impressed 'B' with a stem like a feather, or in later years the Initial GB in a square. Plate by hand drawn glaze designceramics, gary bish, australian studio pottery -
Federation University Art Collection
Ceramic - Artwork - Ceramics, Marian Fox, '70s' by Marian Fox, 2019
Marian FOX (1967- ) Born Malvern, Victoria Marian Fox completed a Bachelor of Visual Art (Ceramics) at the Federation University Arts Academy in 2019. The engobe slip and bronze glaze was made by the artist from a recipe provided by lecturer Peter Pilven. Instagram @marianffox Handbuilt stoneware vessel, with copper oxide, engobe, and bronze glaze. This work won the 2019 Federation University DVC 3D Art Acquisition Award. marian fox, ceramics, alumni, available, dvc art acquisition award, vessel, australian studio ceramics, available for secure display -
Federation University Art Collection
Ceramic - Artwork, Alexandra McKim, 'Untitled' by Alexandra McKim, 2013
Alexandria McKIM (1991- ) Born Australia Alexandra McKim completed studies at the University of Ballarat Arts Academy (now Federation University) in 2013. This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 2000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.64 marbled porcelain halves creating a porcelain diamond. University of Ballarat Acquisition Award, 2013art, artwork, mckim, ceramics, university of ballarat acquisition award, alexandra mckim, dome