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Thursday 20 January 2022

Grant Aston Talk

 In 2015, Grant Aston came to celebrate the entry of his ceramic piece: 'Radioactivitat' into the Swindon Collection, an evening written about here. The Contemporary Arts Society presented the piece through the Omega Fund, if you can click on the link to CAS, they see the piece as a linking between the ceramics collection and the modern art collection. It's very interesting to read what Grant wrote about 'Radioactivitat' and the inspiration for it going back as far as 1975 and the German electro music group, Kraftwerk who wrote a song of that name. At that evening, in 2015, I asked Grant if he would give the Friends a talk, he readily agreed, and gave me his card which I kept. Before the advent of Zoom talks, it was more difficult asking people to travel to give a talk, but now it's much easier, so after 6 years, we had a long awaited evening with Grant Aston to find out what he's done recently.

Grant was born in Stoke on Trent famous for its potteries, the website claims it's the world capital of ceramics. This certainly may have played a part in Grant's decision to take a BA at Cardiff in 1990-2002, and go onto do an MA in 2003 at RCA, this was followed by woodwork and gilding in his Camberwell studio. There was often a mix of paid work and following his own practice, which led him to create work made out of clay in girder shaped pieces, balancing structural and aesthetic elements. It needs a strong foundation to support itself because the clay is a weak material
The piece above, Radioactivitat is the piece we have in the Swindon Collection, the effects of radioactivity on the body is exemplified by this piece. 
Grant went on to produce more pieces in the same vein, their size being limited somewhat by the size of his kiln and the floppy state of the clay used to build them. It must be quite a feat to make them stand up. Polygonal seen above echoes the buildings along the South Bank
The Midland Grand was inspired by a station, maybe St Pancras?
I find these shapes fascinating, so photographed lots of them, sometimes the clay was gilded, using Dutch gold leaf with antiquing fluid.
From these shapes, Grant began incorporating wood, particularly furniture legs into his pieces. Sculptural and artistic practices merging.
I have included a few of these pieces
He joined the Haptic/Tacit Collective around 2015 and has had various exhibitions with the group.
He's now moving to a new area of work, breaking out of brown furniture into something surreal. 
Mind state is an example of one his his newer pieces, He will be exhibiting in Norfolk in March this year, and we wish him every success in his work, and look forward to the next British Ceramics Biennial in 2023 which I hope we can visit.


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