press release

The Flames:
The Age of Ceramics at the
October 15, 2021–February 6, 2022

Gathering over 350 pieces dating from the Neolithic to the present day, the exhibition The Flames: The Age of Ceramics is an immersive exploration of the medium, a fresh, fruitful dialogue between objects from different periods and contexts that brings to light influences as well as coincidences.

An inexhaustible source of inspiration and expression for craftsmen, artists and designers, ceramics—from the Greek keramos, meaning “clay”—is one of humanity’s earliest cultural manifestations, used since prehistoric times to make idols, constructions and food containers.

The exhibition presents ceramics by modern and contemporary artists and ceramicists, among them Jean Carriès, Georg Ohr, Paul Gauguin, Shoji Hamada, Bernard Leach, Marcel Duchamp, Meret Oppenheim, Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali, Raoul Dufy, Lucio Fontana, Beatrice Wood, Ken Price, Ron Nagle, Cindy Sherman, Judy Chicago, Miquel Barceló, Jean Girel, Simone Leigh, Daniel Dewar & Grégory Gicquel, Theaster Gates, Mai Thu Perret, Clare Twomey, Takuro Kuwata, Natsuko Uchino; historical works by Bernard Palissy, Marie Talbot, Dave the Potter and reknown ceramic manufactories; anonymous pieces such as prehistoric Venus figures, ancient Greek vases, and vernacular pottery; and non-European items including Nok pottery, Mochica jars, Tang figures, Iranian reticuled piece and Japanese raku wares.

The exhibition’s transhistorical approach focuses on ceramics as inherently related to art and, more broadly, to humankind. Long underestimated among the arts, the medium can be both functional and sculptural, and as such compels us to rethink existing categories and traditional hierarchies. In its mingling of art, craft and design, The Flames explores not only ceramics’ relationship to the decorative, the culinary and the performative, but also its scope of application in the fields of medicine, aeronautics and ecology.

Three themes structure this exhibition: techniques (clays and firing, shapes, decoration); uses (functional, sculptural, ritual); and messages (trompe-l’oeil, anti-classical, political). Also considered are pieces that deviate from the rules, reinvent codes and challenge procedures, even if the recipes infused with alchemy have hardly changed throughout history.

Like the Phoenix constantly reborn from its ashes, ceramics exerts an increasing yet cyclical fascination linked to the technical unpredictability of the firing and the kiln that can never be completely mastered. Since the late 19th century, the tactility and roughness that have always driven craftsmen have exercised a powerful pull on artists too, together with numerous amators and collectors.

Fire, the inspiration for the exhibition’s title, is a technical resource sparking not only precise properties and functions, but also specific counter-aesthetics and an imaginative richness sometimes verging on the radically utopian. In many respects ceramics is an art of resistance. The recognition of a “Ceramic Age”– one, strangely enough, never previously acknowledged—seems today more obvious than ever.

The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue gathering texts by specialists and artists; an international symposium on the theme Ceramics and Politics, jointly organised by the Society of Friends of the Sèvres National Museum and the Paris Museum of Decorative Arts, at the National Institute of Art History (INHA) in Paris in January 2022; a participative collecting project; a program of workshops and demonstrations; and a pedagogical mobile and miniaturized version of the show for people unable to attend.

Worth noting: as a gesture of respect for the Earth—the primary material for this exhibition—the furniture specially designed by the Cros/Patras agency in collaboration with Natsuko Uchino is more than 50% recycled and recyclable.

In addition, the exhibition will find an echo in a selection of ceramic works belonging to the museum and on display within the permanent collection.

Curator : Anne Dressen, assisted by Margot Nguyen