Bandipur
8 months ago
10 months ago
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Nathan Prouty
“Ludders Plate I”
Found commercial dinnerware, ceramic decals, luster
2011

Nathan Prouty

“Ludders Plate I”

Found commercial dinnerware, ceramic decals, luster

2011

1 year ago
permalink
Nathan Prouty
“Ludders Plate I”
Found commercial dinnerware, ceramic decals, luster
2011

Nathan Prouty

“Ludders Plate I”

Found commercial dinnerware, ceramic decals, luster

2011

2 years ago
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“Nathan Prouty: Recent Work”
April 1 - May 1, 2011
The Clay Studio, Philadelphia PA
Opening Reception First Friday, April 1, 5-9pm
“Nathan Prouty received his BFA in ceramic sculpture from the New York  State College of Ceramics in Alfred NY, and is currently a Resident  Artist of The Clay Studio.  Prouty will be leaving the program this  August in pursuit of his MFA at Ohio University, Athens, OH.   For such a  young maker, Prouty possesses a highly personal voice with a visual  iconography all his own.
The maturity of Prouty’s work belies his young age,  while at the  same time revels in it. The work exudes an exuberance of youth, with his  sculptures being toy-like, brightly colored, cartoon abstractions of  forms one could swear they know. Referencing landscape, architecture and  popular culture, the ambiguity of Prouty’s sculptures  amazes.  He  makes foreign things that are familiar to the viewer, who sees it in a  fresh and original way. His sensitivity as a maker and as a master  aesthetician is evident in every aspect of his work, from his material  choices, to his forms and their texture/surface quality, to his palette,  to the small scale in which he works. The intimacy of Prouty’s  sculptures is disarming.
As Prouty has developed this body of work, he has begun to develop a  vocabulary of surface and form. There are favorites the artist used  multiple times in his sculptures (though varied in scale, color and  surface), which he is now using two-dimensionally as well. In his new  series of tableware, Prouty mirrors the shape or form of some of the  individual components of his work, oftentimes mirroring the textural  surface and palette as well using decals on commercially manufactured  porcelain plates, cups and saucers.   He has also produced a series of  water colors.  Prouty is as successful with these as he is with his  sculptures in creating evocative and ambiguous works and surface imagery  that fully engage, challenge, and delight.”
—Jeff Guido, Artistic Director

“Nathan Prouty: Recent Work”

April 1 - May 1, 2011

The Clay Studio, Philadelphia PA

Opening Reception First Friday, April 1, 5-9pm

“Nathan Prouty received his BFA in ceramic sculpture from the New York State College of Ceramics in Alfred NY, and is currently a Resident Artist of The Clay Studio. Prouty will be leaving the program this August in pursuit of his MFA at Ohio University, Athens, OH. For such a young maker, Prouty possesses a highly personal voice with a visual iconography all his own.

The maturity of Prouty’s work belies his young age, while at the same time revels in it. The work exudes an exuberance of youth, with his sculptures being toy-like, brightly colored, cartoon abstractions of forms one could swear they know. Referencing landscape, architecture and popular culture, the ambiguity of Prouty’s sculptures amazes. He makes foreign things that are familiar to the viewer, who sees it in a fresh and original way. His sensitivity as a maker and as a master aesthetician is evident in every aspect of his work, from his material choices, to his forms and their texture/surface quality, to his palette, to the small scale in which he works. The intimacy of Prouty’s sculptures is disarming.

As Prouty has developed this body of work, he has begun to develop a vocabulary of surface and form. There are favorites the artist used multiple times in his sculptures (though varied in scale, color and surface), which he is now using two-dimensionally as well. In his new series of tableware, Prouty mirrors the shape or form of some of the individual components of his work, oftentimes mirroring the textural surface and palette as well using decals on commercially manufactured porcelain plates, cups and saucers. He has also produced a series of water colors. Prouty is as successful with these as he is with his sculptures in creating evocative and ambiguous works and surface imagery that fully engage, challenge, and delight.”

—Jeff Guido, Artistic Director