Bruno LaVerdiere
Bill Griffith is known for creating sculpture and functional pottery using a stoneware clay body. Griffith?s work is completed on the potter's wheel or slab built, or is a combination of these ...
Read more
Typical Marks
About
- Biography
-
Bill Griffith is known for creating sculpture and functional pottery using a stoneware clay body. Griffith?s work is completed on the potter's wheel or slab built, or is a combination of these two methods. Both sculptural and functional works are typically fired in a wood kiln, although other firing methods are used intermittently.
Evolving from a series called ?Dwellings?, Griffith's sculptural work draws upon ancient structures from the Native American Anasazi, Japanese Haniwa, Mayan and Incan cultures. Architectural references are common, sculptures feature both thrown and slab built elements. Offering a soft geometric approach to this body of work, Griffith's surfaces are marked by cutouts door and window referenced openings which invite the viewer to look closer and examine the intrinsic need for dwelling.
Griffith's functional wares span a varied and rich artistic practice. Signature forms include slab built handle-less pitchers. Surface design includes occasional impressed patterning, and low-relief banding. Like his sculptural forms, Griffith's pottery is typically fired in wood fueled kilns. Griffith states, ?The surfaces, colors and marks on forms are the results of flames striking the pieces, natural ash deposits melting on the surfaces or from stacking or placing other pieces either on top of each other or next to each other in the kiln.?
""" - Apprenticeships & Residencies
-
1991
Watershed Center for Ceramics, Edgecomb, Maine
1962Apprenticeship with Henry Takemoto, Lacey, WA
1991Chateau La Napoule, La Napoule, France
- Primary Work Experience
-
1982
Adjunct Instructor, Adirondack Community College, Queensbury, New York
1955-1969Monk, St. Martin’s Abbey, Olympia, Washington
1965-1967Instructor, Greenwich House Pottery, New York, New York
Other
- Public Collections
-
Bloomsburg State College, Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, Ohio
Dowd Fine Arts Gallery, State University at Cortland, New York
Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York, New York
Lannan Museum, Palm Beach Community College, West Palm Beach, Florida
Mills College, Prieto Memorial Collection, Oakland, California
Monsen Collection, Seattle, Washington
Museum of Arts and Design, New York, New York
Roberson Museum, Binghamton, New York
Schenectady Museum, Schenectady, New York
University of Oregon Museum of Art, Eugene, Oregon
- Bibliography
-
Coyne, John, ed. The Penland School Book of Crafts Book of Pottery. Indianapolis, IN: Rutledge/Bobbs-Merrill, 1975.
Delius, Jean. “Bruno LaVerdiere.” Craft Horizons (October 1977).
Harrington, LaMar. Ceramics in the Pacific Northwest. Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 1979.
Hess, Thomas B. “For Each Man Kilns the Thing He Loves.” New York Magazine, August 1, 1977.
LaVerdiere, Bruno. “From Monastery to Studio: An Autobiography.” Ceramics Monthly (October 1989).
- CV or Resume
- Website(s)
Citation: Bruno LaVerdiere, "The Marks Project."
Last modified April 29, 2026. https://www.themarksproject.org/artists/bruno-laverdiere

