Large Handmade Serving Tray
Ceramic tray, 15-inch x 15 inch
Gail Lloyd is an emerging ceramic artist and graduate of Temple University’s School of Film and Media Arts who enjoyed a career in film and video for over 25 years. She began her ceramic journey (falling in love with it around 2010, then focusing on it full-time in 2015) making functional pottery, both wheel-thrown and hand-built. In 2019, Gail discovered how figurative sculpture offers a dynamic way by which she can explore ideas such as identity, gender, race, religion, class, beauty. She wishes to break down assumptions.
A Quote from Gail:
“Thinking of the word ‘belonging’… Conjures feelings of love, acceptance, respect, caring, intimacy. Belonging in the context of ‘nation’ is complicated for me. My ancestors literally belonged to others without the love, acceptance, humanity, care that must, by definition, accompany ‘belonging’.”
Woman Owned, Black Owned, LGBTQ Owned, Philly Made
Ceramic tray, 15-inch x 15 inch
Gail Lloyd is an emerging ceramic artist and graduate of Temple University’s School of Film and Media Arts who enjoyed a career in film and video for over 25 years. She began her ceramic journey (falling in love with it around 2010, then focusing on it full-time in 2015) making functional pottery, both wheel-thrown and hand-built. In 2019, Gail discovered how figurative sculpture offers a dynamic way by which she can explore ideas such as identity, gender, race, religion, class, beauty. She wishes to break down assumptions.
A Quote from Gail:
“Thinking of the word ‘belonging’… Conjures feelings of love, acceptance, respect, caring, intimacy. Belonging in the context of ‘nation’ is complicated for me. My ancestors literally belonged to others without the love, acceptance, humanity, care that must, by definition, accompany ‘belonging’.”
Woman Owned, Black Owned, LGBTQ Owned, Philly Made
Ceramic tray, 15-inch x 15 inch
Gail Lloyd is an emerging ceramic artist and graduate of Temple University’s School of Film and Media Arts who enjoyed a career in film and video for over 25 years. She began her ceramic journey (falling in love with it around 2010, then focusing on it full-time in 2015) making functional pottery, both wheel-thrown and hand-built. In 2019, Gail discovered how figurative sculpture offers a dynamic way by which she can explore ideas such as identity, gender, race, religion, class, beauty. She wishes to break down assumptions.
A Quote from Gail:
“Thinking of the word ‘belonging’… Conjures feelings of love, acceptance, respect, caring, intimacy. Belonging in the context of ‘nation’ is complicated for me. My ancestors literally belonged to others without the love, acceptance, humanity, care that must, by definition, accompany ‘belonging’.”
Woman Owned, Black Owned, LGBTQ Owned, Philly Made