Textures of the Land

4 January 2020 - 1 February 2020

Working from the Isle of Skye for the past 25 years, Patricia Shone has developed her practise using techniques of texturing and stretching clay. Textures of the Land will feature new work in the Erosion Series and is a culmination of the development of Shone’s very particular making methods, including all three of her firing processes: raku, charcoal saggar and wood firing.

Shone was awarded the Craft Pottery Charitable Trust Emmanuel Cooper Prize in 2019 and her work is held in public collections including the Victoria and Albert Museum, London and the Ceramini Contemporary Ceramics Museum, Turkey.

‘My work is an expression of the continual journey towards understanding my place in life. I can’t separate it from my experience of living in this landscape or from the path that brought me here.’ Patricia Shone.

Born: 1962
Place of Birth: Greenock

Patricia Shone was born in Scotland but grew up in South Devon. After studying ceramics in London, a love of food led her to work as a chef both in London and in Italy, eventually leading her to Skye where she returned to potting and where she has remained for twenty years.

‘My work is informed by the powerful landscape around me on the Isle of Skye. It develops in response to the feeling of connection with its inhabitants and their passage across the land. By walking the paths of predecessors I contribute to the formation of the paths at the same time as obliterating previous footsteps; as an incomer to this community I absorb and am changed by its culture whilst altering it by my presence here. The nuances of contradiction in the human experience of life are very visible here, but the community survives, just as the surfaces of the land are eroded but the substance of it remains constant and immutable.

I make mostly functional forms, boxes, bowls, jars, rather than direct representation of the landscape, because they are innately human vessels; they represent the human condition of surface and content. The natural textures produced by clay reflect the formation and erosion in the geology of the land. The techniques I use to make my pots encourage the development of these textures on the surface of a tight and formal vessel. It has taken many years for me to begin to understand this path in my work, and that our scars from living can be seen mirrored in the scars on the land. The pieces are made by hand building and throwing, texturing, stretching and carving. Colours are achieved using slips, oxides and glazes but most of all by the firing processes. I use raku firing for soft earthenware blacks and greys; wood firing for warm earth tones and glazed stoneware; saggar firing within the wood kiln for dark greys and glazed stoneware. This gives me a wide range of textures and densities of ceramic surface and body.’ Patricia Shone, 2018.

Patricia Shone presents a solo exhibition – 25 Years of Making at The Scottish Gallery in January 2023.

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