Reticule Series: Earth Orange
Clay, Glaze, Various Flux, Multiple Firing
There is a visceral sense of life and time that emanates from Vince Palacios’ new Reticule Series. Using a method that leans heavily on improvisation, the process is high-touch, working from the inside out, as a root would form in the ground and push up and out. Instinctively, Palacios knows when to stop, when the true form of the piece emerges — it is a kind of alchemy that brings the piece to life from its original state. Across the series, the artist then imagines what the form would look like having been buried in a deep cave structure for hundreds of years. The crystalline surfaces and bold colors of geology have always drawn his attention, and the Reticules, in the end, look very much like something hewn from living cave rock.
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There is a visceral sense of life and time that emanates from Vince Palacios’ new Reticule Series. Using a method that leans heavily on improvisation, the process is high-touch, working from the inside out, as a root would form in the ground and push up and out. Instinctively, Palacios knows when to stop, when the true form of the piece emerges — it is a kind of alchemy that brings the piece to life from its original state. Across the series, the artist then imagines what the form would look like having been buried in a deep cave structure for hundreds of years. The crystalline surfaces and bold colors of geology have always drawn his attention, and the Reticules, in the end, look very much like something hewn from living cave rock.
Artwork Information
Year
2024
Materials
Clay, Glaze, Various Flux, Multiple Firing
Authentication
Signed by Artist
The work comes with a Certification of Authenticity signed by the Co-Founder of Tappan
Dimensions
7 x 7 1/2 inches
FRAMED DIMENSIONS
7 x 7 1/2 inches
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About the Artist
Vince Palacios
Vince Palacios' work has been featured in Architectural Digest and is included in several prominent museum collections including The Long Beach Museum of Art, The American Museum of Ceramic Art in Pomona, The Mint Museum of Craft and Design (North Carolina), and JINRO Cultural Foundation (South Korea). He has spent decades honing and developing a unique approach to the use of glass and ceramic materials as a means of crafting intricate narratives addressing geological process, pyroclastic interaction, and heat/chemical reactions.
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This service is currently unavailable,
sorry for the inconvenience.
Pair it with a frame
Frame options are for visualization purposes only.
FRAME STYLE
MATTING SIZE
BUILDING YOUR EXPERIENCE
powered by Blankwall
Take a few steps back and let your camera see more of the scene.
powered by Blankwall
Was this experience helpful?
There is a visceral sense of life and time that emanates from Vince Palacios’ new Reticule Series. Using a method that leans heavily on improvisation, the process is high-touch, working from the inside out, as a root would form in the ground and push up and out. Instinctively, Palacios knows when to stop, when the true form of the piece emerges — it is a kind of alchemy that brings the piece to life from its original state. Across the series, the artist then imagines what the form would look like having been buried in a deep cave structure for hundreds of years. The crystalline surfaces and bold colors of geology have always drawn his attention, and the Reticules, in the end, look very much like something hewn from living cave rock.