Stephen Dixon is a British ceramic artist, satirist, writer, lecturer, and curator. He is professor emeritus at Manchester School of Art. His interests include the British satirical tradition (in both printmaking and ceramics), commemorative wares, and the development of socio-political narratives in contemporary ceramics.
Dixon studied Fine Art at the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and Ceramics at the Royal College of Art, graduating in 1986.
Early exhibitions in London with Contemporary Applied Arts and the Crafts Council established Dixon's reputation for ceramics with a biting political and social satire. His figurative vessels were introduced to the U.S.A. in the early nineties, resulting in solo exhibitions at Pro-Art, St. Louis (1993), Garth Clark Gallery, New York (1995) and Nancy Margolis Gallery, New York (1998). In 1998 Dixon became a Research Fellow at Manchester Metropolitan University.
He is known mainly for his use of dark narrative and for using "illustrated ceramics pots as an unlikely platform for social commentary and political discontent."
Dixon's politically engaged ceramic practice was comprehensively surveyed in a major solo exhibition The Sleep of Reason, a 20-year retrospective showcased at Manchester Art Gallery in 2005 and touring the U.K. from March to October of that year. In 2007 he curated the exhibition 200 Years: Slavery Now for the Bluecoat Display Centre in Liverpool. In 2009 Dixon was awarded the inaugural Victoria & Albert Museum ceramics studio residency, where he embarked on a new body of work exploring political portraiture, Restoration Series (2011âÂÂ2013).
Dixon's oeuvre combines studio ceramic practice with public engagement and community arts projects. In 2000 he received an Arts Council Year of the Artist award for Asylum, a collaborative project with Amnesty International U.K. and Kosovan refugees. For the public engagement projects Resonance (2015), Resonate (2015) and The Lost Boys (2016), Dixon examined commemoration and the material resonance of archives and objects, in the context of the centenary of the First World War. From Renaissance paintings and British politics to pop culture, Dixon draws on a variety of sources to "challenge the status quo and inspire new ways of thinking."
For the Arts Council-funded project âÂÂMaiolica and Migrationâ (2020âÂÂ2022) Dixon examined the issue of refugees and asylum seekers, comparing the contemporary journey of migrants across the Mediterranean into Europe with the historic âÂÂmigrationâ of white tin-glazed earthenware. Its culmination was âÂÂTransient: The Ship of Dreams and Nightmaresâ (2021), which took the form of a Mediterranean refugee boat, representing refugeesâ experiences of the nightmare of conflict and displacement and the dream of refuge. It won the British Ceramics Biennial Award in 2021. Senior curator of ceramics and glass at the Victoria and Albert Museum Alun Graves described the work as "outstanding in concept, design and execution⦠it stands as a work of exceptional humanity, as well as one of remarkable aesthetic presence".
Dixon is now professor emeritus at Manchester School of Art.
He was a trustee of the Crafts Council from 2009 to 2013 and a member of the Art and Design sub-panel for REF 2014 and REF 2021.
"I am interested in the history of clayâ¦the unique way that ceramic relics and fragments communicate across the centuries, telling tales of great personalities and events, as well as the mundane rituals of daily life." â Stephen Dixon
"From the start I was never interested in making functional pieces, and more interested in telling stories and making statements." â Stephen Dixon
Dixon's work is represented in the following museum collections:
Dixon has exhibited at museums and galleries of note in the United States, France, Britain, India, and Australia, including the following: