Jessica Harrison’s Figures, Ladies, and Figurines | Quick Artist Feature

I’m hoping to feature women artists in a variety of ways on They Heal. I love spending hours researching an artist’s life, work, and legacy,…

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I’m hoping to feature women artists in a variety of ways on They Heal. I love spending hours researching an artist’s life, work, and legacy, and developing creative prompts to further explore their art. If I had all the time in the world, that’s all I would do. However, I have limited time and there are many artists to feature! So, I’m going to make short, simple posts about artists and their art that will be easy for me to put together and simple for you to digest. I’ll include pictures, videos, and links for more information if you like what you see and want more! I’m not going to overthink it.

Let’s kick things off with Jessica Harrison. Harrison is a sculptor and ceramicist who works with a variety of themes and creates a wide range of art. I’m only featuring the feminine figures in this post, but I strongly suggest looking at her Vandalised Sculptures and Counterfeits, Imitations and Copies of Works of Art if you want to better understand her scope.

Image of Jessica Harrison from Phiadon

Resources

You can learn more about Jessica Harrison from her website, jessicaharrison.studio, and Instagram, @jessicaharrisonstudio.

This interview by Phaidon is part of their “Why I Create” series and offers insight into Harrison’s process and motivation.

Look at more of her art at Artsy.net and artnet.com.

Read about Harrison’s Painted Ladies in this article by Colossal.
Read about her Broken Ladies in this article by Hyperallergic.

Painted Ladies

Photos by Chris Park/John McKenzie.

Broken Ladies

‘Karen’, 2013. Found ceramic, epoxy resin, enamel paint, acrylic varnish, 12 x 12 x 20.5cm.

Bone China Figurines

Made at sundaymorning@EKWC. Photos by Chris Park.

‘Lauren HN3975’, 2015. Bone china, 21.5 x 16.5 x 17cm.

Found Figures

“The Found Figurines are re-workings of mass produced figurines sourced from online auctions. Through a process of further glazing and multiple firings, the figurines are re-shaped as test tiles for new glaze recipes. Each piece is titled after the original auction listing, including typos, errors and seductive sales descriptions.” – from Jessica Harrison’s website

Series started at Sundaymorning@EKWC in 2015. Photos by John McKenzie.