Neil Tetkowski

Neil Tetkowskibegan his career making functional vessel forms. In 1980 he began making pieces he intended be seen as an extension of functional forms, but clearly not functional. He is known for ...
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    Neil Tetkowskibegan his career making functional vessel forms. In 1980 he began making pieces he intended be seen as an extension of functional forms, but clearly not functional. He is known for his monumental wheel thrown wall-platters that vary in diameter from 34 inches to four feet and can weigh 125 pounds.This scale provides a large area on which to draw and sculpt.

    Tetkowski studied with Val Cushing, Wayne Higby and Robert Turner in the 1970s at Alfred University.

    Tetkowski uses a number of tools including a rail spike, wooden toy propeller and other found materials to incise and tear the surface.He began to cut slices from platters and assemble them to create a new body of work in which some pieces hang on the wall, while others were free standing sculptures. This body of work was built in such a way that the viewer could still see the original platter, bowl or charger form. The surfaces are completed with the application of glazes and colored slips to create a painting that includes dry flakey areas complimented by others with metallic sheen. In 1986 Tetkowski began the American Iron and Steel Series made by firing found metallic objects into clay.

    He spent much of the 1990s creating a series of performance pieces that involved clay and choreography. In 1991 Tetkowski created Ground War, a performed artwork with clay, bullets, and live music. This piece was later cast in bronze. During 1999-2002, he realized his concept of creating the monumental World Mandala Monument. The piece was formed in April 2002using clay from all the member countries of the United Nations. People from those 188 countries worked on the project. Itwas displayed at the United Nations, New York and several museums across the United States.

    Tetkowski?s projects in clay are conceptual sculptures that focus on cultural, ecological, and geopolitical explorations.

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    Apprenticeships & Residencies
    Primary Work Experience
    1980
    -
    1983

    Professor, Denison University, Ohio

    1994
    -
    1997

    Parsons School of Design, New York, New York

    Unknown

    State University College at Buffalo

    Unknown

    Director, University Galleries, Kean University, Union, New Jersey

    Other

    Public Collections

    Alfred Ceramic Art Museum, Alfred University, Alfred, New York

    American Museum of Ceramic Art, Pomona, California

    Ariana Museum of Ceramic and Glass Art, Geneva, Switzerland

    Arizona State University Art Museum, Tempe, Arizona

    Burchfield Penney Art Center, Buffalo, New York

    Canadian Clay and Glass Gallery, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

    Canton Art Institute, Canton, Ohio   

    Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

    Castellani Art Museum, Niagara University, New York

    Charles H. MacNider Art Museum, Mason City, Iowa

    Daum Museum Of contemporary Art, Sedalia, Missouri

    Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York

    Foundation Keramion, Centre of Modern + Historical Ceramics Frechen, Frechen, Germany

    Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

    Georgia Museum of Art, Athens, Georgia

    Hetjens Museum, Dusseldorf, Germany

    Honolulu Museum of Art, Honolulu, Hawai’i

    Huntington Museum of Art, Huntington, West Virginia

    Icheon World Ceramic Center, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea

    Illinois State Museum, Springfield, Illinois

    International Museum of Ceramics, Faenza, Italy

    Kermiex Museum, Princessehof, The Netherlands

    Memorial Art Gallery, Rochester, New York

    Morris Museum, Morristown, New Jersey

    Museum of Applied Arts, Helsinki, Finland

    Museum of Arts and Sciences, Macon, Georgia

    Museum of Modern Art, Buenos Aires, Argentina

    Museum of Modern Art, Kogeikan, Tokyo, Japan

    Newark Museum, Newark, New Jersey

    Noyes Museum of Art, Oceanville, New Jersey

    Ohi Museum, Kanazawa, Japan

    Palace of Culture and Science, Warsaw, Poland

    Racine Art Museum, Racine, Wisconsin

    Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

    San Angelo Museum of Arts, San Angelo, Texas

    Smithsonian American Art Museum, Renwick Gallery, Washington, DC

    Suntory Museum, Tokyo, Japan

    Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Taipei, Republic of China

    Terracotta Museum, Petroio, Italy

    The Trout Gallery, Dickenson College, Carlisle, Pennsylvania

    Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England

    Bibliography

    Chambers, Karen S. “Neil Tetkowski: Playing with Plates.” The World and I (1990). 

    Hirschfeld, Sasha. “Generations in Time.” Ceramics Monthly (March 2005).

    Hunt, Bill. “Common Ground: Neil Tetkowski’s World Mandala Movement.” American Craft (August/September 2002).

    Koplos, Janet. ”Neil Tetkowski.” American Ceramics Magazine (1985).

    McFadden, David. “Neil Tetkowski’s Urban Ikebana.” Ceramics: Art and Perception 43 (2001). 

    McTwigan, Michael. “Neil Tetkowski.” American Ceramics 7 (1989).

    Minogue, Coll. Impressed and Incised Ceramics, Gestures in Clay. Gentle Breeze Publishing Company, 1996.

    Perrault, John. “Neil Tetkowski.” American Ceramics Magazine (2003).

    Tetkowski, Neil. “The Terracotta Project.” Ceramics Technical (2011).

    ________. Common Ground World Project: April 10th-May 5th, 2000, United Nations. New York, NY: United Nations, 2000.

    Welch, Adam. “Neil Tetkowski’s Earth Fragments.” Ceramics: Art and Perception (2013).

    CV or Resume

    Website(s)
    Tags (related topics)

    Scripps College Ceramic Annual

    Granville, Ohio

    New York, New York

    Buffalo, New York

    Citation: Neil Tetkowski, "The Marks Project."
    Last modified April 29, 2026. https://www.themarksproject.org/artists/neil-tetkowski

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