Chris Barnes has been working with clay for more than 25 years. He makes thrown stoneware pots which are fired with gas, using his kiln to bring out a wide range of colours from his glazes. The ware is mostly for table use and invites touch and handling. Being stoneware it is durable as well as being beautiful.
Chris Barnes studied Sculpture at St. Martins School of Art, London 1978-82 and then did very little of note in the wider world until he helped set up the Chocolate Factory studios in Stoke Newington, Hackney - moving into his first studio at the site in 1995. In 2006 he moved to Morvern, Argyll to set up a pottery.
In 2009 Chris moved to Cumbria where he works in a converted farm building
known as The Duckshed. There he has built another gas fired kiln which
has been in use since then.
Chris says "I make two sorts of pots - stoneware and raku pieces. They reflect
a love of clay as a material and it's magical transformation in firing.
Clay is fundamental and has been used to make all manner of objects from the earliest civilisations to the present time. Through firing it has the potential to make the moment permanent and idiosyncrasy iconic. I try to make pots in the balance of the timeless and the impermanent, the universal and the personal."
His sculptural raku fired work is made in response to nature and was influenced by contact with Ian Godfrey at his workshop in Highgate, London in the late 1980's. Ian's playful ceramic sculpture had a liberating effect and Chris has returned to making sculptural pieces periodically over the intervening years.
Chris has exhibited widely and is a member of the CPA.