We are sharing each of the artists participating in our current exhibition H2O through our blog series, Artists Sharing Artists, so you can learn a little more about them and their artwork. If you’d like to come see the show in person, please check out our pop-up event schedule and/or book a private tour with us! If you’d like to purchase work, please contact us!

About the Artist:
Susan McBride of Mind Clay Body Studio unearthed her passion for clay after receiving the M.S. in Education/Social Policy from Northwestern University. A Chicago based educator, ceramic artist, and painter, McBride has taught in the US, China, Kenya, and Mexico. Wood firing and studio affiliations include Made Chicago, Barro Sur, Taller de Terreno, and Theaster Gates Studio. She also is certified in Clay Field Therapy, a haptic based, sensorimotor intervention that can help heal trauma or developmental delays.
McBride crafts pots inspired by the intersection of natural and urban environments and finds purpose and peace through ceramic work. She makes functional and sculptural ceramics for contemplation, relaxation and the practice of life. Sourced from our earth, clay is rock weathered over time. Intrigued by the scientific and haptic nature of the material, for McBride it links humans to our planet and to each other. She explores a variety of clay bodies and glazes in different firing atmospheres and fuel sources, including gas, wood, electric, to learn the chemistry occurring in each kiln that best enhances the work placed inside it. Every clay pot has its own story and can serve as a reminder of our individualism and humanity.
As an artist-activist, she organized and led Nasty Women Art Chicago, co-created “Pots to the People: Seconds for the First Amendment” and was an invited artist for “Still Counting,” an exhibit honoring women’s rights at SOFA Chicago. Representing Firebird Community Arts, she taught a hand building series for Red Line Service members, an arts-based support group for the unhoused, in Hull House Museum’s “Radical Craft” exhibition. Cast in a print media campaign for The Field Museum, her portrayal as ‘Viking woman’ was featured on billboards and buses throughout the city.

3,500 – 3,200 MXN each, please inquire for specific pieces






About the Art:
The ollas I created for this show are wheel thrown local clay mixed with a red sculpture body and are examples of an ancient irrigation system used world wide where low fire pots are buried from the neck down and filled with water. Soil moisture tension pulls the water through the unglazed, porous walls of the olla to the thirsty roots of plants nearby. These vessels exemplify the reverent connection between the earth, the hands of a maker, and the joint effort between both to produce our flora, fauna and food, all while utilizing our greatest resource, water.
www.mindbodyclay.com IG @samceramics.mcb
Earth Art Studio believes in supporting working artists! Purchasing art work and/or contributing a donation for your visit to the sculpture trail helps keep our creative community thriving and making more art!
Currently, the studio is only open for scheduled events and by appointment.
Please contact us if you’d like to visit!