Ceramicist Eunbi Cho’s Invisible City of Clay
Inside a small studio located at an armpit intersection conjoining the Los Angeles State Historic Park with one of the city’s most defiantly industrial zones, ceramicist Eunbi Cho has been busy conjuring the skyline of an imaginary city. Piece by piece, the LA ceramicist has diligently composed a cityscape once only mapped by memory, inspired by a 1972 Italian novel about imaginary cities.
A quartet of examples of Cho’s “Made for Play” catalog of geometric ceramics. Cho’s sense of humor adds a colorful veneer to the serious skill required to realize forms intended to be used daily.
Cho has steadily gained the attention of ceramic lovers locally and globally for a body of work characterized by its energetic combinations of colors drawn from traditional Korean textiles intermingled with a bizarro-geometric sensibility in the same vein of Ettore Sottsass.
Under the banner of “made for play”, each of Cho’s pieces operate with a notion of functional, but never without an emphasis upon the “fun”. A “brutalist” pour-over cone dripper inspired by the shapes of water towers, a cleverly executed “bake-n-wake” mug with its own built-in chillum and straw, tasting cups designed to be worn as pendants, a stash box formed into an intentionally cracked egg ? it’s an architectural style riding the delicate edge between structure and collapse, function and imagination, sculpture and everyday o...
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