LUCINDA MUDGE, Never R.I.P (Fight Fight Fight) (after Sonia Delaunay)
Glazed ceramic, gold lustre, 64 cm
LUCINDA MUDGE, Silence is Violence / Turn Up The Music (after Emilio Pucci)
Glazed ceramic, gold lustre, 50 cm
LUCINDA MUDGE, In Court of Cats Rats Never win the Case
Ceramic, gold lustre, 38 x 30 x 30 cm
LUCINDA MUDGE, Vase with Catteau Pattern and Vipoo's Peace Sign
Ceramic, gold lustre, 46 x 30 x 30 cm
LUCINDA MUDGE, Yesterday is History Tomorrow is a Mystery
Ceramic, gold lustre, 44 x 30 x 30 cm
LUCINDA MUDGE, If I Ever Had to Run For My Life I Would Probably Die
Ceramic, gold lustre, 55 x 36 x 36 cm
LUCINDA MUDGE, If You're Feeling Guilty It's Because You Probably Are
Ceramic, gold lustre, 59 x 31 x 31 cm
LUCINDA MUDGE, I Remember When We Had Such Fun (after Emilio Pucci)
Glazed ceramic, gold lustre, 40 cm
LUCINDA MUDGE, Everything All The Time (after Sonia Delaunay)
Glazed ceramic, gold lustre, 48 cm
LUCINDA MUDGE, Born to Wish for More
Ceramic, gold lustre, 56 cm
Lucinda Mudge is a contemporary South African artist working primarily in the medium of ceramics.
As a ceramicist, Mudge’s chosen medium is fragile by nature, and prone to fracture. Sudden changes in temperature in her kiln can cause her large-scale vases to crack, crumble, or collapse, rendering months of hard work futile. In Mudge’s love affair with ceramics, this crazing of clay is akin to heartbreak. It can start slowly – small cracks appearing and spreading, familiar patterns disintegrating, once bright hues fading into oblivion – or it can all fall apart without warning. ‘It’s a brutal choice of material,’ says the artist, and, like love, it can bring both great joy and great misery. But it is this chaos and unpredictability that is central to both our existence and Mudge’s work. Moreover, the choice of the vase as a canvas holds great significance. Commonly a functional household object, the vase has a presence which is genuinely welcoming and affirming; It is a familiar and domestic object.
Mudge’s extraordinary vases captivate the eye with their rich colours and intricate detail. Both a visual and a socio-political record, her work draws inspiration from a wide variety of references, including cartoons, pop songs, fabric designs and Art Deco vase patterns, resulting in whimsical collisions of the popular and refined, the mundane and elevated, the violent and the beautiful. This range of contemporary and historical sources merge to present a complex narrative familiar to many South Africans. With hand-mixed glazes and stains and produced painstakingly slowly, each piece is as unique as the narrative it tells. Themes, images, and text are reworked and reshuffled, embodying in their very fabric humanity’s ability to carry contradictory impulses simultaneously.
Lucinda Mudge has worked in major corporate and private collections nationally and internationally, including the United Kingdom, Australia, Guernsey, the Netherlands, Italy and Russia. Lucinda’s work was also exhibited at the Guggenheim Bilbao, Spain, as part of the exhibition Making Africa (2015).
LUCINDA MUDGE, Love and Marriage
Ceramic, gold lustre, 61 cm
Lucinda Mudge is a contemporary South African artist working primarily in the medium of ceramics.
As a ceramicist, Mudge’s chosen medium is fragile by nature, and prone to fracture. Sudden changes in temperature in her kiln can cause her large-scale vases to crack, crumble, or collapse, rendering months of hard work futile. In Mudge’s love affair with ceramics, this crazing of clay is akin to heartbreak. It can start slowly – small cracks appearing and spreading, familiar patterns disintegrating, once bright hues fading into oblivion – or it can all fall apart without warning. ‘It’s a brutal choice of material,’ says the artist, and, like love, it can bring both great joy and great misery. But it is this chaos and unpredictability that is central to both our existence and Mudge’s work. Moreover, the choice of the vase as a canvas holds great significance. Commonly a functional household object, the vase has a presence which is genuinely welcoming and affirming; It is a familiar and domestic object.
Mudge’s extraordinary vases captivate the eye with their rich colours and intricate detail. Both a visual and a socio-political record, her work draws inspiration from a wide variety of references, including cartoons, pop songs, fabric designs and Art Deco vase patterns, resulting in whimsical collisions of the popular and refined, the mundane and elevated, the violent and the beautiful. This range of contemporary and historical sources merge to present a complex narrative familiar to many South Africans. With hand-mixed glazes and stains and produced painstakingly slowly, each piece is as unique as the narrative it tells. Themes, images, and text are reworked and reshuffled, embodying in their very fabric humanity’s ability to carry contradictory impulses simultaneously.
Lucinda Mudge has worked in major corporate and private collections nationally and internationally, including the United Kingdom, Australia, Guernsey, the Netherlands, Italy and Russia. Lucinda’s work was also exhibited at the Guggenheim Bilbao, Spain, as part of the exhibition Making Africa (2015).
LUCINDA MUDGE, Some People
Ceramic, gold lustre, 51 cm
Lucinda Mudge’s extraordinary vases captivate the eye with their rich colours and intricate detail. Yet beneath their glimmering
surfaces is a familiar world simmering with paranoia and tension.
Both a visual and a socio political record, her collection of vases draws inspiration from a wide variety of references, including cartoons, pop songs, fabric designs and Art Deco vase patterns, resulting in whimsical collisions of the popular and refined, the mundane and elevated, the violent and the beautiful. This range of contemporary and historical sources merges to present a complex narrative familiar to many South Africans.
Using hand mixed glazes and stains, and produced painstakingly slowly, each piece is as unique as the narrative it tells. Themes, images and text are repeated and reshuffled, embodying in their very fabric humanity’s ability to carry contradictory impulses simultaneously.
Specialists in contemporary art from South Africa. Established in 1913. South African artists are part of the global conversation. We seek to make their voices heard.