Photo: TMP
Photo: TMP

Cup of Silence

USA, 1990
<p>This table top sculpture rests on a ring of intricately cut metal. The goblet form body is very narrow at the base then gently curves outward to create a top heavy form. The top is covered with a flat piece of clay with a circle cut out, there is  a straw shaped piece of clay across it. The surface is glazed mottled grey and brown.</p>
American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA)
Date acquired:
Materials:
Stoneware
Form - Functional: N/A
Form - Sculptural:
Installation - small/intimate scale
Method:
Thrown
Surface Technique: N/A
Kiln Type: N/A
Glazes: N/A
G. E. Colpitts

G.E. Colpitts is known for hand-built and wheel thrown earthenware sculptural vessel forms composed of fragmented and discarded clay from the process of forming the pieces as well as other materials. These vessel forms are often cone shaped with an inset fragmented lid, or flat tops. These pieces are small enough to be handheld, Surfaces may include breaks, cracks, and wooden fragments. Each object is a complete statement.

Two important series are Project 1216 and the Cenotaph Series. These involve extensive historic research, drawings, ceramics, and mixed media installations.

Colpitts has been a member of the following organizations: Foundations in Art: Theory and Education (FATE), Christians in the Visual Arts (CIVA), Illinois Higher Education Art Association (IHEAA), and as a board member of the Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, Illinois.[


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American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA)

Colpitts in other collections

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Last updated: April 22, 2026

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