Rick Dillingham
July 11, 2005 until July 30, 2005
Rick Dillingham was born in Lake Forest, Illinois in 1952 and died in Santa Fe, 1994. Dillingham, a master ceramicist, received his Bachelor of Arts at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque in 1974. His Master of Fine Arts was completed in 1979 at California\'s Claremont College of Arts and Crafts. A recipient of several National Endowment for the Arts Visual Artist Fellowships, Dillingham was renowned for his work in contemporary ceramics and for his scholarship of the pottery traditions of the North American Indian. As a dealer of historic and contemporary native pottery, Dillingham used his knowledge to provide the finest in Pueblo pottery to his clientele and worked to create several magnificent exhibitions of Pueblo pottery, as well as publishing classic texts such as
Acoma and Laguna Pottery (click here to view details of book by Rick Dillingham. Available from Adobe Gallery).
and
Fourteen Families in Pueblo Pottery (click here to view details of book by Rick Dillingham. Available from Adobe Gallery).
Dillingham\'s own work reflected his interest in native pottery traditions, while his most famed forms, the shard vessels, are reflective of his restoration work at the Laboratory of Anthropology in Santa Fe, where he formulated a paradigm of pots as a whole, made of many pieces. His works are broken in countless shards and variously decorated with glazes, gilded, or painted before reassembling.