Skip to main content
Mirage Lake
Mirage Lake

Mirage Lake

Wayne Higby (born in 1943)
1984
Object PlaceAlfred, New York, United States
Medium/TechniqueRaku-fired earthenware
Dimensions27.94 x 46.99 x 42.54 cm (11 x 18 1/2 x 16 3/4 in.)
Credit LineGift of Mary-Louise Meyer in memory of Norman Meyer
Accession number1984.770
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsCeramics
Description
Wayne Higby studied painting in college but became a ceramist after an epiphany during a junior-year trip abroad. While traveling in the Mediterranean, he visited the Heraklion Museum on the island of Crete, where he encountered Minoan pots of the Bronze Age. As he later described the experience, he was swept away by the pots and their "magnificent sense of shape, volume," and painted decoration; he claims, "I became a potter the day I walked into that museum." Upon his return to the United States, Higby sought out training in ceramics and studied with studio potters Betty Woodman and Fred Bauer. He has since become a leader in American ceramics, teaching for more than thirty years at the famed New York State College of Ceramics in Alfred, New York, and producing work that has been exhibited and acquired by major museums across the country.A landscape image that envelops both the interior and exterior of a vessel is the dominant motif of Higby's elegant ceramics. The artist credits his childhood in Colorado with instilling his love of "being in the landscape." Like the nineteenth-century American landscape painters he admires, including Albert Bierstadt and Frederick Edwin Church, Higby says he tries to capture a sense of being in a particular geographic place. At the same time, he highly values the clay vessel as a format for his work, focusing particularly on the large bowl form because of its universal, abstract qualities.This text was adapted from Ward, et al., MFA Highlights: American Decorative Arts & Sculpture (Boston, 2006) available at www.mfashop.com/mfa-publications.html.
ProvenancePurchased by MFA, 1984, from Helen Drutt Gallery, Philadelphia.
CopyrightReproduced with permission.
Harvey S. Sadow, Jr.
1981
Time Line Spirit III
David Davison
1980
Double duct flute
Douglas Deihl
1984
Anne Dean Hathaway
about 1985
Time Line Spirit III
David Davison
1980
Vessel
Nancee Meeker
1983
Tea bowl
Raku Chônyû
18th century
Plate
Chelsea Pottery U.S.
1895