Female War I Am Pottery 01 2015

—End

Critics called it defiant but not militant—an exploration of endurance, a refusal to romanticize suffering. The show’s politics were embodied, not dogmatic: these objects asked for attention to the textures of women’s lives, the ways warfare is waged in expectations and economies, in silence and in the slow erosion of possibilities. female war i am pottery 01 2015

"Female War I Am Pottery" was a declaration that to make is to resist. The act of shaping clay—pressing, hollowing, firing—became testimony. Pottery, often relegated to the sphere of craft and the domestic, was weaponized through care: its surfaces told stories, its forms held memory. In that January, the pieces did not merely stand on pedestals; they held court, demanded reckoning, and quietly, insistently, reframed what it means to be a maker who has known battle. —End Critics called it defiant but not militant—an