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Miriam Bloom

Arts/Industry: Pottery, 1990

Work by Arts/Industry artist-in-residence Miriam Bloom, 1990. Photo: Kohler Co.

Miriam Bloom is an American artist who creates asymmetric, biomorphic sculptures situated at the boundary between representation and abstraction. Bloom’s sculptures begin as small sketches and clay maquettes and then find their new life in papier-mâché, terracotta, or plaster forms. Often taking several years to construct, her objects are artistic meditations, meticulously formed with gaps, holes, and inconsistencies intended to offer room for the spirit. Conceptually, her organic forms are influenced by the beauty in irregularity and asymmetry similarly found in the visual art of Jean Arp, Louise Bourgeois, and Constantin Brancusi. Bloom is also inspired by ancestral Puebloan vessels, the Hindu lingam, and the Japanese concept of wabi-sabi.

Bloom’s work has been exhibited internationally, including in Hiroshima, Japan; Malmo, Sweden; Lippstadt, Germany; and Istanbul, Turkey. She has been the recipient of the Gottlieb Foundation grant, Athena Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, The Marie Walsh Sharpe Art Foundation, and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation grant. Her sculpture is in museum and private collections including the Bass Museum in Miami; DePaul Art Museum in Chicago, Bemis Foundation in Omaha, the Louise Nevelson estate, and others.

Bloom holds her BA from Brandeis University and her MFA from the University of Iowa.

Arts/Industry Residency

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