Cedar Grove Pottery
Home Cedar Grove Gallery Biography        Galleries & Events
Ceramic Wall Relief        Sculptural Vases        Tea & Kitchen Ware
 

Biography

In 1971, Sandra obtained a BS in Art Education from New York State University College. Upon graduation, she taught at the Adirondack Center for the Arts, as well as owned and operated a gallery in upstate New York. After immigrating to the Canadian Rockies in 1974 and establishing a homestead, Sandra taught and ran a clay studio specializing in salt/woodfired pottery. In 1989 she relocated to Galiano Island, British Columbia, where she has spent the last years making a home for her small family and establishing her studio and gallery set amongst the beautiful red cedars of BC. Over the years she has hosted and presented numerous workshops which have focused on various pottery techniques such as throwing, handbuilding and raku firing. As well, an important aspect of her work in the ceramics field has to with apprentices: Each summer she hosts a new student, to whom she can pass on her knowlege of clay, business, and gardening. Sandra's visits to Japan began in 1998, where she studies, makes pots and meditates in a Zen Buddhist temple.

Sandra's work is presented in various galleries throughout Northwestern Canada, the US and Japan. In August 2007 she held a very successful 3-person painting and ceramic wall relief show entitled "Island Edges" at her gallery on Galiano, and in October of last year had a second solo show at Granville Island's BC Potters Gallery, featuring her new framed ceramic wall reliefs. She's had solo shows at KOBO Gallery in Seattle, WA and Comox Valley Art Gallery in Courtney, BC, and in 2004 as well as 2008 participated in Fired Up! in Victoria, BC.

Sandra Dolph is best known on Galiano Island as a potter with an international reputation. Surface decoration of form has always been a large part of her work. But in the last few years decoration of the flat surface has become a major area of exploration. She uses the rich color of ceramic underglazes, terra sigillatas, and her signature "lichen glaze" to render impressions of the Galiano coastline: the waves, the sea, the clouds, and the sky. She incises line and texture with found natural objects, sometimes imbedding beach stone or sand into the clay. As well, she uses shells, bark, plants and other interesting prizes that come home with her from her long daily walks along the shores and in the forests of Galiano Island. The resultant two-dimensional but softly undulant works are vibrant, and flushed with warm earthy tones that are indicative of her love of the environment in which she lives.

Artist Statement:

I have been a maker of thrown functional pots, artful vessels, and sculptures for 35 years. However, within the last year I have become completely taken with the flat surface. In the beginning, these surfaces were made into pots, but they quickly evolved into 2-D pieces that were framed and hung on the wall. My coastal and forest surroundings have been the themes for these new pieces, and I feel I'm just starting to scratch the surface of the potential for what I have to express in what I see and feel from these environments. I can see "growing old" within this format of the flat surface, richly exploring my world in a simple, yet potentially profound form.

Sandra Dolph
Galiano Island, BC Canada