Landfill No. 20 Section 2

Jonathan Mess

The Good Supply Pemaquid Maine Environmental Artist Jonathan Mess Ceramic Sculpture Landfill No.20 Section 2 Made in Maine USA
  • The Good Supply Pemaquid Maine Environmental Artist Jonathan Mess Ceramic Sculpture Landfill No.20 Section 2 Made in Maine USA
  • The Good Supply Pemaquid Maine Environmental Artist Jonathan Mess Ceramic Sculpture Landfill No.20 Section 2 Made in Maine USA
  • The Good Supply Pemaquid Maine Environmental Artist Jonathan Mess Ceramic Sculpture Landfill No.20 Section 2 Made in Maine USA
  • The Good Supply Pemaquid Maine Environmental Artist Jonathan Mess Ceramic Sculpture Landfill No.20 Section 2 Made in Maine USA
  • The Good Supply Pemaquid Maine Environmental Artist Jonathan Mess Ceramic Sculpture Landfill No.20 Section 2 Made in Maine USA
  • $425.00

This graphic sculpture boasts an unlikely and extremely beautiful array of color. Pinks and a translucent blue adorn one face of this vertical rectangular prism, while another is rich with forest green and pale yellow. Textures from the corrugated cardboard that helped form its mold, give this classic shape a subtle texture, which helps soften the hard edges of its box-like form. 

Mess has long given up buying new material to create his ceramic art, choosing instead to recycle discarded clays and glazes, of which there are endless quantities. Ceramic studios all over Maine welcome this artist’s resourceful scavenging and environmental mission.

The name of this art piece harkens not only the imagery of layering but also the concept of waste and build up over time. Viewed with the right lens, raw material that can be used and reused is sheer beauty.

- Measures 10” x 5” x 5”
- Various reclaimed ceramic materials
- May require additional shipping

Jonathan Mess is a contemporary ceramic artist from midcoast Maine who allows his art to be driven by instinct and experimentation. The freedom in his process unifies his various series, which are energetic, ambitious, and Environmental Art.

Using reclaimed materials and unconventional techniques, Jonathan Mess has a unique style. His work is a vehicle for education, guiding viewers to consider waste, recycling, and purposeful art. He is also an educator of youth, teaching ceramic and sculpture courses at Lincoln Academy in Newcastle, Maine.

Mess has an MFA in Ceramics from The State University of New York at New Paltz and a BFA in Studio Art at University of Montana - Missoula. The artist's solo exhibitions and major awards date back to 1998, and his work is exhibited internationally.

In 2018, Portland Museum of Art in Maine included Mess’s sculptures in its Biennial exhibition. 2019 will host his work at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum Biennial. The exhibit is a survey of contemporary art of New England showcasing compelling and ambitious art-making in the region.

We are honored to work with both Jonathan and his wife Kate Mess, award-winning enamelist and jewelry artist. Their studio endeavors have been closely linked since they met in graduate school in 2006. Renowned in their respective disciplines for innovation in pushing material boundaries, both Kate and Jonathan credit Maine’s rugged coastline and nature as their primary inspiration.

The Good Supply hosted an art exhibition in 2017 entitled Symbiosis. The theme explored the similarities and differences between Kate and Jonathan’s work. The way their practices intertwine opens a dialogue of the benefit of cross-medium influence and experimentation. The couple work out of studio spaces in their home, a renovated gambrel barn in Jefferson, Maine.

From the Artist:

I’m excited to have my work at The Good Supply because I see it as my local gallery, which cares about representing local artists. It means a lot to me that my friends and teaching colleagues and kids at the school where I work have the chance to see my work, whereas if I have a show in Boston, no one in my hometown sees it. The local connection and sense of community is a really important part of art-making for me.

From the critics:

"Mess is in a class by himself as a Maine contemporary artist. His ceramic sculptures are built up like sediments, and take on geological logic through their construction and firing processes. The slips, glazes and clays shift, expand and shrink at varying rates in a way that mirrors geological activity on a macro level. What we see are cross-sections of layers of dynamic color and form with organic activity defining them. They are fascinating and powerful objects.” - Daniel Kany, Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram

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