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Sunday, September 7, 2025 |
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"Pigeon Crib: Houston Edition" presents Robert Lugo's defiant, genre-making ceramic works |
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Installation view of Roberto Lugo: The Gilded Ghetto. Photo by Joe Kramm, courtesy of R & Company.
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HOUSTON, TX.- Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (HCCC) and R & Company are co-presenting Pigeon Crib: Houston Edition, the first solo exhibition of work by celebrated ceramic artist Roberto Lugo in Texas.
Roberto Lugo is known for infusing traditional ceramics with a 21st-century street sensibility. His defiant, genre-mixing practice confronts the colonial legacy embedded in the history of ceramics, while affirming clays universal resonance across cultures and centuries. Lugos amphora forms inspired by Classical antiquity feature contemporary cultural icons such as Selena, Dennis Rodman, and Tupac Shakur, among others. Elsewhere, dragons and ornate surface motifs from Chinese imperial porcelain fuse with Hip Hop emblems like Nike Air Force 1 sneakers and pitbull-shaped umbrella stands, remixing decorative traditions with autobiographical and pop cultural references.
HCCC Curator + Exhibitions Director Sarah Darro notes, It feels particularly apt to cite Pigeon Crib in Houstonthe city where chopped and screwed remixes were bornbecause Roberto Lugos work similarly metabolizes and samples visual culture. He inflects historical ceramic forms with autobiography, Taino symbolism, graffiti, and 90s hip hop.
At the heart of the exhibition is the artists interpretation of the famed 19th-century Peacock Room, a gilded porzellanzimmer (porcelain room) that was designed to house the prized ceramic collection of British shipping magnate, Frederick Richards Leyland. The room was painted with an eponymous avian motif by James McNeill Whistler and became globally known as a symbolic critique of wealth and power in arts patronage. Lugos homage to the iconic space includes a handmade mantle, lined with mosaic tile accents and framed by a shelving system holding an array of the artists ceramic vessels and decorative objects. The installation reflects the artists longstanding interest in approaches to connoisseurship and the ways in which collections illuminate the forces and motivations that shape artistic production.
In conjunction with the exhibition, Lugo will deliver the 2025 Booker-Lowe Lecture at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houstons Glassell School of Art on September 20, 2025. This highly anticipated talk offers a rare opportunity for the public to hear directly from the artist about the influences that shape his radical approach to ceramics. An artist and poet, Lugo brings a deeply personal and politically engaged perspective to this distinguished annual lecture series.
A curated retail installation of limited-edition works by Lugo will be on view and available for purchase at HCCC during the run of Pigeon Crib. These artist-made pieces offer an accessible extension of the exhibition and reinforce Lugos commitment to creating work that lives expansively beyond the gallery space.
Roberto Lugo is a Philadelphia-based artist, ceramicist, social activist, poet, and educator. Lugo utilizes classical pottery forms in conjunction with portraiture and surface design reminiscent of his North Philadelphia upbringing and Hip Hop culture to highlight themes of poverty, inequality, and racial injustice. Lugos works utilize traditional European and Asian ceramic techniques reimagined with a 21st-century street sensibility. Their hand-painted surfaces feature classic decorative patterns and motifs combined with elements of modern urban graffiti and portraits of individuals whose faces are historically absent on this type of luxury item--people like Sojourner Truth, Dr. Cornel West, and The Notorious BIG, as well as Lugos family members and, very often, himself.
Lugo holds a BFA from the Kansas City Art Institute and an MFA from Penn State. His work has been featured in exhibitions at the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Houston Center for Contemporary Craft, and the Museum of Arts and Design in New York, among others. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including a 2023 Heinz Award, a Philadelphias Cultural Treasures award, a 2019 Pew Fellowship, a Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon Polsky Rome Prize, and a U.S. Artist Award. His work is found in the permanent collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The High Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, the Brooklyn Museum, the Walters Art Museum, and more.
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