Sylvia Hyman

Born: 1917, Buffalo, New York

Sylvia Hyman is known for hyper-realistic, trompe l?oeil, porcelain hand built sculptures. Hyman uses everyday objects as her subjects?books, notepads, keys, purses, etc. Assembled into narrative compositions, these objects were decorated, finished ...
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    Sylvia Hyman is known for hyper-realistic, trompe l?oeil, porcelain hand built sculptures. Hyman uses everyday objects as her subjects?books, notepads, keys, purses, etc. Assembled into narrative compositions, these objects were decorated, finished and combined to form a still life.

    Hyman used tools as needed. Among these were molds and an electric slab roller. The slab roller allowed her to create trompe l?oeil paper with its thickness precisely made to the scale of the finished sculpture. The techniques used to create realistic surface details of each component were achieved by combining or inventing multiple techniques as needed. Among these were screen printing images or text and the applications of slips or glazes. Hyman innovated approaches to convincingly create wooden crates, brown paper bags, rolled up blue prints, nails, screws, etc. These are just some of the objects combined by Hyman to create a sculpture and engage the viewer in the discovery of its unexpected content.

    Hyman was an art teacher in the New York Public School System and the Peabody College for Teachers.

    In 1973, Hyman represented the USA in the first United States International Ceramics Symposium (ICS) in Memphis, Tennessee. The Symposium honored twenty-five artists representing thirteen countries. In 1994 Hyman received a Lifetime Achievement Award in the Arts from the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C. A retrospective exhibit of her work was held in 1995 at the Tennessee State Museum in Nashville, Tennessee.

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    Apprenticeships & Residencies
    Primary Work Experience

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    Public Collections

    American Museum of Ceramic Arts, Pomona, California

    Museum of Decorative Arts, Prague, Czech Republic

    Renwick Gallery, Washington D.C.

    Saga Prefectural Museum, Saga, Japan

    Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C.

    Tennessee State Museum, Nashville, Tennessee

    Bibliography

    DeMay, Susan. “Sylvia Hyman: Fooling the Eye.” Ceramics Art and Perception, 2009. http://www.ceramicart.com.au/cap67.shtml

    Layer, Aiden. “Sylvia Hyman.” Tennessee Arts Commission: Permanent Collection. https://tnartscommission.org/permanentcollection/sylvia-hyman/

    Ribar, David. “Sylvia Hyman.” Ceramics Monthly, Oct. 2002, pg 51-54.

    “Sylvia Hyman: Fictional Clay.” Frist Art Museum, 2007. https://fristartmuseum.org/exhibition/sylvia-hyman/

    “Sylvia Hyman.” Smithsonian American Art Museum.  https://americanart.si.edu/artist/sylvia-hyman-27682

    CV or Resume

    Beul, Jasmine

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    Tags (related topics)

    American Museum of Ceramic Art

    AMOCA

    American Ceramic Society

    ACerS

    Center for Craft

    CfC

    sculpture

    Trompe l?oeil

    Hyper-realistic

    Museum of Decorative Arts, Prague, Czech Republic

    National Museum of Women in the Arts

    Renwick Gallery, Washington D.C.

    Saga Prefectural Museum, Saga, Japan

    United States International Ceramics Symposium

    ICS

    Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C.

    Tennessee State Museum, Nashville, Tennessee

    Citation: Beul, Jasmine Sylvia Hyman, "The Marks Project."
    Last modified April 29, 2026. https://www.themarksproject.org/artists/sylvia-hyman-0

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