The British Ceramics Biennial continues until 09 November 2023

The British Ceramics Biennial continues with Neha Gawand Pullarwar presenting a series of works inspired by the first wave of the Industrial Revolution and how it shaped Stoke-on-Trent, the centre of British pottery manufacture, and colonial Bombay/Mumbai, once the centre of Indian cotton manufacturing and trade.

Neha was selected as the British Ceramics Biennial – Indian Ceramics Triennale residency exchange artist for 2023, and is presenting her work at the British Ceramics Biennial after spending time working in Stoke on Trent at the BCB studios

The exchange and residency was supported by the British Ceramics Biennial, the Indian Ceramics Triennale and Charles Wallace India Trust.

The Indian Ceramics Triennale will open in New Delhi in January 2024.

Read more here on Neha.

M Boardman