Vital Clay

2 December 2023 – 18 February 2024

Wednesday – Sunday

Make, Somerset

10 am – 4 pm

‘Working with clay involves all the senses to some degree: the smell of the earth; the sound made by the ring of a high fired piece; and the sense perhaps forgotten by the majority today, and conspicuous from its absence from our culture—the tactile response.’—Dan Kelly

About

‘Vital Clay’ celebrates the work of acclaimed ceramicists, Akiko Hirai and Dan Kelly, whose practice reveals a physicality of form and fluidity of surface texture, with the intervention of the maker’s hand tempered by the wilfulness of the clay and the alchemy of the kiln. For both artists, vessels act as containers for historical reference and conceptual enquiry. Through the language of clay, they embrace the elements of shape and form with a vigor and originality of vision.

At the heart of Hirai’s practice is the investigation of the moon jar, as she reimagines the traditional Korean form through skilful material manipulation. Hirai continually pushes the boundaries of her material, her jars occupying the liminal space between completion and collapse, which she refers to as ‘the condition of progress, something ambiguous, unsettled and imaginative.’ Studies in balance through imperfection, the texturally rich surface of her jars appear to erupt with movement. For Hirai, everyday experiences and emotions filter into the unconscious mind and are traced across the surface of her vessels. Capturing moments in time, these static forms become inhabitants of human interaction. Her swollen, pregnant poppy pod forms—thrown on the wheel and sculpted by hand—are marked, cracked and pitted, their surface fragility accentuated by the coating of ash on porcelain.

Over many years, Kelly has pared down his forms and simplified the finished surface working mainly with a monochrome palette, allowing a clarity of form. For this exhibition, Kelly will present works that demonstrate an assured material knowledge and intuitive engagement with his medium. His wheel-thrown stoneware pots are manipulated by cutting and reshaping by hand. His works have been influenced by the city environment of London, UK, traces of the human and the manmade, urban architecture, graffiti, road markings and signage. Further inspiration is derived from European and Far Eastern traditional pots, Japanese Bizen and Tamba wares. Working on the wheel encourages an improvisational approach, retaining the soft clay qualities of the freshly thrown form and adding active marks and contrasting details.

Image: Installation view, ‘Vital Clay,’ Make Hauser & Wirth Somerset, 2023. Photo: Dave Watts

About the Makers

Akiko Hirai
Akiko Hirai’s vessel forms focus on the interconnectedness between maker, the object and the viewer. Hirai’s moon jars push her material to its limits, with the originality of her process evidence of the unstable and unpredictable nature of clay and fire itself. Inspired by the moon jars of Korea, which embrace cracks, stains and chips from years of use, Hirai intentionally references the human condition through the making of her vessels with the shifting outcome of color, the scarred and disrupted surface, and the scale and generosity of form as unpredictable as the vagaries of life experience. Her poppy pod vessels are thrown on a wheel using a unique blend of Raku clay. Once dried, the subtle intervention of the maker’s hand achieves the final finish, the dust of ash on porcelain the last trace of earth and fire.

Installation views

Current Exhibitions