KOBO Seattle | since 1995

Birdie Boone

Birdie Boone is a maker of pots and researcher of the domestic realm, 
especially social tendencies and their effects on personal identity with 
regard to food and modern lifestyle. She has taught ceramics at the 
university level and has been involved in many ways with clay centers 
across the country.
Birdie grew up in both the slow culture of southwestern Virginia and the fast 
culture of the city of San Francisco. She was always encouraged to be 
creative and declared an intent to be a potter at the age of six.
Birdie Boone received her BA in art from The College of William and Mary 
in Virginia in 1994 and an MFA in Artisanry/Ceramics from the University of 
Massachusetts, Dartmouth in 2005. Birdie was notably a long-term resident 
artist at The Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts in Helena, 
Montana, from 2007 to 2009.
Known for her minimalist handbuilt tableware and atypical glaze colors, 
Birdie currently lives and maintains her studio practice in Santa Fe, New 
Mexico. Her ceramic work can be found at galleries across the country, 
including Anthony Schaller Gallery in St. Joseph, MI; The Northern Clay 
Center in Minneapolis, MN; and The Clay Studio in Philadelphia, PA. For 
more information and updates on shows and workshops, visit her website: 
www.birdiebooneceramics.com
Artist’s Statement, 2014
"My ceramic dishes are minimal objects; they are understated and are, at 
times, even overlooked. Invest a little time with them and you will discover 
subtle elements that form the dialect by which I translate what I observe 
around me. My intent is to address the significance of the domestic 
experience through the honesty of simply composed forms and thoughtfully 
developed glazes. There are no unnecessary details; every element is 
carefully considered. An individual, family, or community may be rendered 
through soft, volumetric forms and tinted transparent glaze applied over an 
opaque slip discloses the dark clay beneath. These collaborate to create a 
complex visual depth replete with connotations. This sense-full ideology 
requires only that the user be open to its possibilities. Thus, my pots are 
not only useful objects, they are also subjects that have the ability to affect 
their users’ sensibilities and to act upon the domestic spaces they occupy."