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American,
b. 1974
Vessel
2006
16 x 6.5 x 6.25 in.
Gift of the Nora Eccles Treadwell Foundation
2006.20.1-2
Forrest Lesch-Middelton is a potter, tile maker, and educator living and working in Petaluma, California. He discovered his love of pottery at the age of 14. According to a description in the New York Times in 2013, Lesch-Middelton makes ceramics that “look like the products of an ancient civilization whose people proudly insisted on being buried with their dishware.” Vessel showcases his invention of a technique he termed “volumetric image transfer,” where he transfers screen-printed patterns using iron oxide “ink” onto the surfaces of stoneware pots while they are still wet. Usually these are in cylinder form, with straight flat walls. Since they were thrown on the wheel, they require him to shape the vessels from the inside only, so as to not disturb the exterior pattern. In 2013 he began making architectural tiles, which have since been used in private homes, restaurants, hotels, and businesses throughout the world. In 2019 he published a book on the design, creation, and installation of custom tile.
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