MAKERS | THE AMERICAS | USA | CERAMICS
Peter Schlesinger | Ceramic Artist

L.A. born Peter Schlesinger has long defied categorisation: a painter who never quite felt at ease with painting, a photographer who never claimed the title, and a ceramicist whose internationally celebrated sculptures – three decades in the making – found recognition only over time despite insisting; “I don’t consider myself a craftsperson”. Yet across every discipline, his work remains strikingly original and deeply resonant. Today, Schlesinger is represented by Sperone Westwater in New York and Tristan Hoare in London.
How did you begin?
I started as a figurative artist, drawing and painting, taking classes from childhood through college. I was a painter for many years. At a certain point I became dissatisfied with painting and the paint itself and wanted to work with my hands three dimensionally. I had always collected ceramics, mostly English studio ceramics. My work combines the sculptural aspects of the clay with the painterly glazing.
How did you learn?
I took some lessons in clay from a friend in New York who was a potter. He taught me the bare basics. From there I read a lot of books.
Who or what most inspires your work?
A soup of ceramic cultures and art history that over time has turned into my own language.

Peter exhibiting at Tristan Hoare; 'The Language of Vessels' (12 April - 10 May 2024). © Tristan Hoare
How do you plan, prepare and create?
I make multiple sketches in a sketch book. The work is made by hand building using slabs. Usually I don’t know how I am going to glaze them until I start the glazing process.
What does a typical day look like?
There is no typical day. But the clay demands a continual working of layer upon layer.
One more thing… A place or space that most inspires you?
My garden and the plants in it are a constant inspiration.
What music do you listen to when you work?
I work in silence. I’ve tried listening to music and find it a distraction.
Interview by Lucrezia Lucas
Images courtesy Peter Schlesinger, Tristan Hoare and Eric Boman