Jeanne Quinn

Jeanne Quinn is an American ceramic artist who works primarily with installations. She is a Professor in the Department of Art and Art History at the University of Colorado. She lives and works in Boulder, Colorado, and Brooklyn, New York.

Jeanne Quinn
EducationUniversity of Washington
Alma materOberlin College
Known forCeramic installations
Websitehttp://www.jeannequinnstudio.com/

She has been a resident artist at the MacDowell Colony, the Archie Bray Foundation,the European Ceramic Work Centre (EKWC) in the Netherlands, the International Ceramic Center in Denmark, and the Kahla Porcelain Factory and the Ceramic Center-Berlin in Germany.

Exhibitions

Quinn's work has been exhibited internationally in several major museums and galleries, including the Denver Art Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver; Robischon Gallery, Denver; Greenwich House, New York City; Grimmerhus Museum, Denmark; Formargruppen Gallery, Malmö, Sweden; Sculpturens Hus, Stockholm, Sweden; and the Taipei County Yingge Ceramics Museum, Taipei, Taiwan.

Sources

Her work is included in the books The Artful Teapot, by Garth Clark;[1] Postmodern Ceramics, by Mark Del Vecchio;[2] Sex Pots, by Paul Matthieu;[3] A Ceramic Continuum: Fifty Years of the Archie Bray Influence,[4] by Peter Held, and Confrontational Ceramics, by Judith Schwartz.[5]

gollark: FINALLY!
gollark: According to the spec, it increments the accumulator. Of course, some implementations optimize it out unless the accumulator is accessed.
gollark: Well, it's implementation-dimplementation-dependent.
gollark: !esowiki HQ9++
gollark: The OOP extension is especially great. It really follows important OOPSOLIDACRONYMSAREFUN principles.

References

  1. The Artful Teapot, by Garth Clark. New York: Watson-Guptill Publications, 2001.
  2. Postmodern Ceramics, by Garth Clark and Mark DelVecchio. New York: Thames and Hudson, 2001.
  3. Sex Pots, by Paul Mathieu. Piscataway, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 2003. Published simultaneously by A & C Black, London; Verlag Paul Haupt, Bern.
  4. A Ceramic Continuum: Fifty Years of the Archie Bray Influence; essays by Garth Clark, Patricia Failing, Janet Koplos, Rick Newby, and Chere Jiusto. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2001.
  5. Confrontational Ceramics, by Judith Schwartz. Published simultaneously by A & C Black, London and University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.