“Small Acts of Permanence,”
Exhibition
Exhibition
Robert’s ceramic works begin with mass, not as measurement, but as sensation.
They are not composed so much as accumulated: pressed, stacked, negotiated into being. Each piece carries a quiet gravity, as if it has settled into itself rather than been arranged. Less constructed object, more form that has arrived.
Clay is not neutral here. It resists, records, remembers. It splits, bows, occasionally fails. These moments aren’t corrected they define the work. Edges soften, slabs tear, surfaces are refined and then disturbed again. What emerges is a continuous negotiation between hand, material, and process, a balance between control and collapse.
The forms are deliberately blunt. Reduced. Gesture is stripped back rather than layered on. The work sits between restraint and rubble, presence and disappearance, testing how far an object can be pushed before it loses its ability to hold itself. Structurally, visually, spatially.
Ultramarine glaze moves accordingly. On smooth planes it settles into a dense, glass-like blue; at edges it thins, retreats, exposing what sits beneath. It doesn’t conceal the object it reads it, heightening the tension between refinement and rawness.
The works operate as a language rather than a set of singular objects. Forms repeat, shift, compress, collapse. They suggest vessels, markers, fragments of structure, but never fully resolve. Instead, they sit between object and architecture, use and memory. Like small-scale ruins, or something familiar half-remembered.
They aim to feel both ancient and contemporary, not through reference, but through reduction. Base, wall, opening, enclosure. Gestures close to the origin of making. These works don’t chase novelty; they search for something constant. Something rediscovered rather than invented.
Ultimately, they are studies in mass, aperture, and equilibrium objects poised between making and remembering.
Works that feel as though they’ve always existed only now uncovered.
