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  • Painterly Figures Entwine in Soojin Choi’s Ceramic Sculptures Grace Ebert
    β€œMy process is a constant negotiation with gravity,” says Soojin Choi. The artist creates intimate ceramic sculptures depicting a pair entwined in an unknottable embrace, their limbs a seemingly endless tangle. With pockets of negative space peeking through, the characters pose in a precarious balance. β€œI intentionally minimize ground contact to prioritize the specific gestures and the psychological tension between the two figures, giving the work a sense of lightness and emotional presence,”
     

Painterly Figures Entwine in Soojin Choi’s Ceramic Sculptures

27 March 2026 at 14:07
Painterly Figures Entwine in Soojin Choi’s Ceramic Sculptures

β€œMy process is a constant negotiation with gravity,” says Soojin Choi. The artist creates intimate ceramic sculptures depicting a pair entwined in an unknottable embrace, their limbs a seemingly endless tangle. With pockets of negative space peeking through, the characters pose in a precarious balance. β€œI intentionally minimize ground contact to prioritize the specific gestures and the psychological tension between the two figures, giving the work a sense of lightness and emotional presence,” the artist adds.

A long-time resident artist at The Clay Studio in Philadelphia, Choi is formally trained as a painter, a background that informs the sweeping, gestural marks of her pieces. The figures are depicted as three-dimensional line drawings with the quick outlines in a darker hue, while visible brushstrokes and drips layer atop a coat of white slip. β€œI prefer surface finishes that feel active and tactile, allowing the traces of my hand and the movement of the material to remain visible on the final sculpture,” she says.

a figurative clay sculpture by Soojin Choi that looks like a three-dimensional drawing of twisted limbs
β€œBlush Back” (2025), slip and underglaze on stoneware, 29 x 27.5 x 20 inches

Choi begins with an idea of how the two figures will interact and what ambiguous moment they might create. As she carves their forms from stoneware slabs and strengthens them with nylon strands, the initial plan often veers in another direction. β€œWhat I find most exciting is that the figures’ gestures often evolve and shift during the construction process,” she says, adding that the β€œgray area” of human emotion is where she strives to end up.

Currently, Choi is exploring the unpredictability of glazes and how they can offer a dynamic quality. β€œWhat fascinates me about glazeβ€”unlike the more direct application of paintβ€”is how subtle shifts in chemical ratios and kiln heat produce radically different, often unpredictable outcomes,” she says.

Johansson Projects will present the artist’s work in a duo show next month, and she has another group show slated for September at Mesa Contemporary Art Museum. Head to Instagram to see more of her process.

a figurative clay sculpture by Soojin Choi that looks like a three-dimensional drawing of twisted limbs and two faces
β€œHold Me Not” (2025), slip and underglaze on stoneware, 25 x 24 x 14 inches
a figurative clay sculpture by Soojin Choi that looks like a three-dimensional drawing of twisted limbs
β€œI Found You Out” (2024), slip and underglaze on stoneware, 40 x 21 x 27 inches
a figurative clay sculpture by Soojin Choi that looks like a three-dimensional drawing of twisted limbs
β€œNo One Needs to Know” (2024), slip and underglaze on stoneware, 40 x 31 x 28 inches
a figurative clay sculpture by Soojin Choi that looks like a three-dimensional drawing of twisted limbs on a white pedestal with a painting and additional floral sculptures behind it
β€œWhat I Forgot To Say” (2025), slip and underglaze on stoneware, 30.5 x 20 x 19 inches

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Painterly Figures Entwine in Soojin Choi’s Ceramic Sculptures appeared first on Colossal.

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