Akiko Hirai
The ceramic artist Akiko Hirai’s Still Life bottles, feel like they have been lifted out of a Georgio Morandi painting. Her work is a cultural blend of both Japanese and British studio pottery traditions, resulting in asymmetrical, ‘imperfect’ organic forms. Akiko takes the ‘imperfect’ piece and tries to make perfection in her mind. She calls this ‘balance’. If it’s a good balance of imperfection she feels she is able to complete it in her mind. Recently she has been inspired by some impressionist paintings described in the exhibition guide as unfinished and therefore not considered ‘proper’ paintings at the beginning of this art movement. In the world of craft it was the connoisseurs, not the makers, who found beauty in the unpolished peasant craft work of Japan. These pieces were called ‘gete-mino’ translated as ‘badly made’ and were consequently considered second class artefacts. She is attracted to the unrefined quality of objects and in her work and she reveals great beauty in this ‘unpolished’ work.
Akiko tends to work with dark clay. The white glazes she uses act as a veil and give her work a feeling of stillness. She looks for contrast in the rawness of the dark textured clay and the purity the lighter glazes.
Having obtained a BA in ceramic design from Central St Martins in 2003, Akiko’s work has grown from strength to strength gaining her international acclaim. She was previously head of ceramics at Kensington & Chelsea College but due to the high demands for her work is now working full time in her ceramic studio in London.
Akiko’s work is sought after by collectors worldwide and is part of the permanent collection at the Keramikmuseum Westerwald (Westerwald Ceramic Museum), Germany.
See Our Feature on Akiko Hirai
Read our 2017 Spotlight on Akiko Hirai
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20 Years of Cavaliero Finn
Revisit Cavaliero Finn's landmark 20th anniversary exhibition at Stockwell Studio 8 May - 1 Aug 2024In 2004, Juliana Cavaliero and Debra Finn curated their first exhibition as Cavaliero Finn in a home in South London and they haven't looked back since.Read more
For this exhibition, Cavaliero Finn returned to its South London roots to celebrate its 20th birthday at Stockwell Studio. The exhibition featured a wide range of artists who have shown with the gallery over the last 20 years including work by our current portfolio of artists and work from some of our earlier artists, like painters Holly Frean, Daisy Cook and Caroline Popham, paper artist Thurle Wright, designer makers Sam Edkins and Deborah Bowness, and sculptors Tom Stogdon, Danuta Solowiej, Merete Rasmussen and Patricia Volk who returned to the gallery as guest artists for this show. The exhibition also included an installation by textile artist Isabelle Fletcher and new work by Lise Herud Braten, the most recent additions to the Cavaliero Finn portfolio.
Revisit this exhibition online now.
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FOCUS/20
Cavaliero Finn presents work by eight leading ceramicists 14 - 25 Sep 2020We are back from a short summer break and, for the first time since lockdown, we are exhibiting again and the good news is that there’s still time to see...Read more -
Alter
27 Nov - 1 Dec 2019“Alter”, a ceramic exhibition presented by Cavaliero Finn at Fitzrovia Chapel examines the transformative qualities of clay and the belief in the transformative power of material thinking through innovation and experimentation.Read more