Ceramic Artists
   
Marilyn Stover

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Orange Shino Basket w Cedar Handle

Ceramic

18" x 25" x 12"

$325

Double Rim Bowl

Ceramic

22" x 17" x 9"

SOLD!

Platter with Pine Trees

Ceramic

6" x 19"

$145

Gold, Ash, Teal Basket with Grapevine Handle

Ceramic

21" x 23" x 12"

SOLD!

Gold, Ash Basket with Grape Branch Handle

Ceramic

26" x 14" x 12"

$300

Gold, Ash, Blue Basket with Tall Cedar Handle

Ceramic

22" x 10" x 10"

SOLD!

Hanging Rhubarb Leaf Platter

Ceramic

22" x 21" x 5"

$250

Rectangular Asparagus Platter

Ceramic

SOLD!

Green Oval Textured Platter

Ceramic

21" x 7"

SOLD!

Crab Dip Bowls

Ceramic

$38

Brie Bakers

Ceramic

$36

Fern Baquette Tray

Ceramic

13"

$38

Carved Fish Bowl

Ceramic

Various sizes

$38-45

Dessert Platter with Bamboo Imprint

Ceramic

20" x 7"

$75

Platter with Net and Crab

Ceramic

21" x 14"

$195

Rhubarb Leaf Bowl

Ceramic

6" x 10" x 10"

$70

Platter with Net and Fish

Ceramic

21" x 14

$190

 

Marilyn Stover

Marilyn Stover's "incredible wanderlust" has been a major influence on her life and in her work with clay. After obtaining a degree in Spanish, Marilyn worked as an international flight attendant for fifteen years. Her travels included trips to South America, which instilled in her a strong interest in Mayan, Aztec, and Inca cultures and art forms. In 1989, an encounter with potter Dan Finch led Marilyn to express her memories of foreign culture in clay. Her reliefs are reflections of her travels abroad, and the tiles that she creates are based on her love of Native American art.

Through the early '90's, Marilyn studied pottery and glaze making under Ed Brown at Barton College in Wilson, North Carolina. In Wilmington, North Carolina for a year she studied raku, box making, and other pottery techniques under internationally respected potters, Hiroshi Sueyoshi and Traudi Thornton.

Marilyn's hand built clay forms now include coiled clay baskets. She incorporates natural accents such as cedar or grapevine handles with beads and feathers in her baskets. Combining "products of nature" with clay vessels provides interesting contrasts and satisfies Marilyn's desire to use more than one element in her work.

Marilyn's most recent adventure involved teaching pottery on a Princess Cruise ship for a month with her husband, John, who is also a clay artist.  Again, this combined their love for clay with travel.  They enjoyed cruising through the Panama Canal, making port calls in Central and South America and the Caribbean, while teaching throwing and hand building during the at-sea days. 

 

511 Red Banks Rd. | Greenville, NC 27858 | Phone 252.353.7000 | Fax 252.353.7007 | Email Art@CityArtGreenville.com