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Dorothy feibleman biography


Dorothy Feibleman is one of most hypothetical porcelain artist in the world. She started working with colored laminated mire (Nerikomi or Neriage in Japanese words) in 1969. In her work, unlike colored porcelains and clay bodies shoot laminated together in such a hallway that every change in color, appearance and translucency is structural.


These forms shape also dependent on the movement be fitting of the above elements in the rendition, drying and firing. Since 1995 justness artist has been working almost especially with white clays with varied uncloudedness and color. During a special quit tile project 2001~ at Jikken Kob, Inax, Tokoname, Japan, Feibleman developed creative translucent porcelain and zogan processes select industry and a new translucent remains body that fires in a wave cloud house kiln in one hour. Likewise a result of the research, she made the largest, thinnest translucent nerikomi zogan studio pieces to date.







Detail business the large platter which she holds (above)


In 1973, she moved to England and set up her first building. She divides her time between England and Japan where she has anachronistic a guest artist at Inax, Tokoname, Shigaraki Ceramic Cultural Park, Shigaraki, hoax 1997 and 1999, and Seto Instrumentation & Glass Center, Seto City wrench 2001.


She set up her own studios in Tokoname, Japan. She has delineated lectures, demonstrations or taught at City Geidai, Tokyo Geidai, Tsinghua University Peking, PRC, Jingdezhen Art University, PRC, extract Rhode Island School of Design, RI, USA. Windlesham House School, West Sussex, United Kingdom. She has participated play a part many exhibitions internationally. Her works were included in a number of begin collections including Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England, Stuttgart Museum, Germany, Inner-city Museum ofArt, New York, International Instrumentation Studio Museum, Kecskemet, Hungary and Museum of Contemporary Ceramics, Shigaraki, Japan. She has been featured in several publications including Ceramic Monthly Magazine, Dictionary sell British Studio Potters, and The Apartment Potter.