Clay Grisby

Clay Grigsby is known for wheel thrown functional porcelain pottery with highly textured surfaces. Signature forms include pitchers, bowls, and mugs among a variety of other functional wares.

Grigsby throws thick walled forms. ...
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Typical Marks

    About
    Biography

    Clay Grigsby is known for wheel thrown functional porcelain pottery with highly textured surfaces. Signature forms include pitchers, bowls, and mugs among a variety of other functional wares.

    Grigsby throws thick walled forms. This technique provides multiple options for creating textured surfaces at the greenware stage. Once the finished form is thrown, Grigsby alters the thick walls of the piece directly on the potter's wheel using wiggle wires, cheese cutters, or fluting tools. These tools effectively peel off a layer of the exterior clay wall, leaving a richly textured surface. In addition, Grigsby also uses rasps to texture, or square the exterior of vessels in the leather hard stage. Each textural technique is typically used independently of the others in designing each vessel.

    Once bisque fired, 4 to 8 glazes are applied to using a spray gun. Work is then glaze fired in a mid-range electric kiln. A variety of earth-tone, blue, green and yellow glazes appear on Grigsby's work. Surface finishes range from semi matte to gloss surfaces.

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    Apprenticeships & Residencies
    Primary Work Experience
    1989

    Potter, Grigsby Pottery, Cleveland, Tennessee

    1989
    -
    1999

    Adjunct Professor, Ceramics, Chattanooga State Community College, Chattanooga, Tennessee

    Other

    Public Collections

    Museum Center at 5ive Points, Cleveland, Tennessee

    Smithsonian American Art Museum, Renwick Gallery Washington, D.C.

    Bibliography

    Demay, Susan. “Tennessee Clay Ways.” Ceramics Art & Perception (2000).

    CV or Resume

    Jeffrey Kuratnick

    Website(s)
    Tags (related topics)

    Southern Highland Craft Guild

    Center for Craft

    University of Tennessee

    Illinois State University

    Grigsby Pottery

    Citation: Jeffrey Kuratnick Clay Grisby, "The Marks Project."
    Last modified April 29, 2026. https://www.themarksproject.org/artists/clay-grisby

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