Artist
Nigel Lambert
Nigel lambert’s pots are both decorative and useful. He began his love of pottery and paintings whilst at art college in Cornwall. His interest in the work of abstract painters, particularly Roger Hilton ,Terry Frost, Patrick Heron and other artists from the Cornish peninsula; has influenced his work and the decorative marks he makes. His work is approached not as a painter, but as a potter.
Clay is the starting point.After the pots are thrown or pressed from flat sheets of clay, these are cut and re-formed into oval and square forms.They are dipped in a white clay slip, dried, and then coated with green, amber and clear glazes, which produces a flat surface on which the blue oxides are painted, with new and old brushes, and odd bits of sponge. Lines and motifs are often scratched through the blue, adding another narrative to the image.The pots are then fired in an 80cu/ft wood fired kiln.This un-predictable and challenging process adds an extra depth to the quality of the glaze.
Historic pots and potters have been a strong influence on Nigel’s approach to ceramics. From the warm colours of old French and Spanish peasant ware, the fine brush work of
Delft pottery; to more recent potters such as Michael Cardew, Peter Smith and American potter Jeff Oestrich.
Nigel lambert trained at Cornwall College, and with Roger Cockram at his North Devon pottery. He established his first workshop in Bristol in 1987, this lasted until 1990 when he moved to the Forest of Dean, where he currently lives and works.
He has exhibited widely in England, Europe and Australia and was elected a fellow of the Craft Potters Association in 1990.