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Reading: Concentric Forms Escape the Confines of the Ceramic Vessel in Matthew Chambers’s Sculptures — Colossal
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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Artists > Concentric Forms Escape the Confines of the Ceramic Vessel in Matthew Chambers’s Sculptures — Colossal
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Concentric Forms Escape the Confines of the Ceramic Vessel in Matthew Chambers’s Sculptures — Colossal

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 20 November 2024 20:43
Published 20 November 2024
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It’s been almost exactly a decade since we first featured the concentric, ceramic vessels of Matthew Chambers on Colossal, and in that time, we’ve come to find his sculptures no less stupefying.

From his studio in St. Lawrence on the Isle of Wight, Chambers continues to push the boundaries of the medium. The artist is known for nesting meticulously scaled forms inside slightly larger pieces, all of which are thrown on a wheel. Hypnotic and seemingly endless, the dynamic works appear like vast portals that descend into relatively small vessels.

For his most recent pieces though, Chambers has switched his focus from inner to outer, as the aligned forms shift in position to swell outward and upward. Each sculpture is an opportunity to explore a particular pattern, he adds, and now, that process involves extrapolating motifs and the limits of the spherical shapes.

After 18 months of back-to-back exhibitions, Chambers is now slowing down and returning to his studio to experiment and try new methods. His works will be on view with Cavaliero Finn at Collect Art Fair in February 2025, and until then, find more of his sculptures on his website and Instagram.

a yellow ceramic sculpture with concentric forms that twist and well outward
a ceramic sculpture with concentric forms that twist and well outward
a ceramic sculpture with concentric forms that twist and well outward
a peach ceramic sculpture with concentric forms that twist and well outward
a ceramic sculpture with concentric forms that twist and well outward

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