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Chalice
Beatrice Wood (American, 1897–1998)
American
1965
Object Place: Ojai, California, United States
Medium/Technique
Terracotta with iridescent glaze with bronze and pink highlights
Dimensions
21.59 x 17.14 x 17.14 cm (8 1/2 x 6 3/4 x 6 3/4 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Catharine Gardner Mayes and George Peabody Gardner, in memory of their father, George P. Gardner
Accession Number65.495
CollectionsContemporary Art, Americas
ClassificationsCeramics – Pottery – Earthenware
This chalice evokes religious rituals common to both Christian and pagan traditions, connecting this ceramic form to acts of spiritual adoration. The artist was nicknamed the “Mama of Dada” for her early collaborations with artists like Marcel Duchamp, and chose ceramics as her medium after taking an adult education pottery class in 1933. She enrolled after purchasing some dessert plates with luster glaze, for which she hoped to make a matching teapot. Though she never made that teapot, she dedicated herself to ceramics for the rest of her life. Her signature use of scintillating luster glazes lends her vessels an emotive, shimmering quality of iridescent euphoria.
ProvenanceGift of Catharine Gardner Mayes and George Peabody Gardner, in memory of their father, George P. Gardner, 1965.
Copyright© Beatrice Wood and the Happy Valley Foundation