Resident Artist

Elizabeth DeLyria, Well of the Soul, 2010. Handbuilt, coil and slab construction, stoneware, bisque fired to cone 07, pit fired with terra sigillata and, glaze. Photo by Elizabeth DeLyria.

Elizabeth DeLyria

Medium: Ceramic Artist
Residency: January 1, 2010–
December 31, 2010

www.edelyria.com

Originally a landscape painter, ceramic artist Elizabeth DeLyria translates the concept of landscape into the functionality of clay. She says, “Clay is Earth. Even the processes used to manipulate clay occur in nature: stains, smoke, the graceful flow of slip on the surface, like silt in a river. Stones, birches, dunes, lakes—these are also Earth, and yet fundamentally different.”

DeLyria uses the versatility of clay to suggest these different forms of nature, her pieces serving as reminders of the unity of the world around us. The mineral of clay becomes a tree; the three-hundred-million-year-old fossil surface of a rock becomes the fluid, sloping surface of clay. At the same time, the functionality of her vessels serves to emphasize nature in our daily lives. “When something is made out of wood that’s not wood, we start to notice wood again. Working with clay means you can eat cereal out of a landscape.”

DeLyria holds a MEd in Art Education from the University of Houston, with an emphasis in Ceramics, and a BA in Painting from the University of New Orleans. She served as a U.S. State Department Cultural Envoy to Russia, exposing educational practitioners to American teaching methodology throughout Russia. She received the Robert Rauschenberg “The Power of Art” Award, was invited to participate in the Teacher Institute of Contemporary Art at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and was chosen by the Texas Commission of the Arts as the “State Featured Teacher” of 2006. From 1996 to 2009, DeLyria taught ceramics and metalsmithing at Alief Hastings High School and is currently a teaching consultant throughout Texas. DeLyria’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally and is represented by galleries in Michigan and Texas.

More Residents

September 1, 2015 –
December 31, 2015
Medium: Metal
September 1, 2015 –
July 10, 2016
Medium: Fiber
September 1, 2015 –
August 30, 2016
Medium: Ceramic
September 1, 2015 –
August 21, 2016
Medium: Ceramic
July 31, 2015 –
May 30, 2016
Medium: METAL
July 1, 2015 –
August 31, 2015
Medium: Metal

The application for the 2025 – 2026 cycle opens January 1, 2025. It’s free to apply!

The Artist Residency Program is designed to offer time and space for craft artists to focus on their creative work and interact with the public. The program supports emerging, mid-career, and established artists working in all craft media, including but not limited to clay, fiber, glass, metal, wood and mixed media.

The application for the 2025 – 2026 cycle opens January 1, 2025. It’s free to apply!

The Artist Residency Program is designed to offer time and space for craft artists to focus on their creative work and interact with the public. The program supports emerging, mid-career, and established artists working in all craft media, including but not limited to clay, fiber, glass, metal, wood and mixed media.

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