Bob Pesce: The Vortex Series
The work of Bob Pesce is on display in the front window and the gallery this month.
Bob Pesce is a display designer and native New Yorker who mastered the use of a potter’s wheel at age fourteen and hasn’t stopped yet. His undergraduate work at Pratt Institute and the art department at Brooklyn College has led to exhibitions of his pottery and wood sculpture at both institutions as well as a co-op gallery in Brooklyn.
His current series of ceramic pieces center on a fascination with the continuity of the cosmos as seen in the small everyday object . (Think the marbles at the end of “Men in Black”). Organic and sensuous, his pieces evoke whirlpools and flowers among other things. Think of yourself enveloped in a swirling mass of comforting energy and you’ll be right at home with his work.
Professional work includes the Holiday Décor Installations at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., the residence of the Vice President (Al Gore), the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers, as well as twenty rooms (each room themed in a different fairy tale) at the Lyndhurst Castle in Tarrytown. His work has been published in the book, The Heart of Christmas, as well as the Village Voice, Victorian Homes, The Journal News, Westchester Magazine, and numerous trade magazines and is the basis for the book A Fairy Tale Christmas (Stewart, Tabori and Chang, NYC, a subsidiary of Harry N. Abrams, Inc.).
Bob’s work will also be featured at the TOJ Gallery booth at The Modern Show: October 16-18, 2009, 7 W 34th Street at Fifth Avenue, New York City.






Our annual staff retreat took place in early August at the beautiful upstate New York home (endearingly referred to as La Mano North) of Peggy and Howie.











I love playing with color and texture in clay. I focus on functional pottery, and have never concentrated on one particular style. I prefer to let each piece speak in its own voice, reflecting a feeling, mood, or attitude. My work ranges from carved pieces to altered jars and bowls to hand-sculpted ware, and I work both on and off the wheel.
La Mano is featured on the Time Out New York website: “Roll up your sleeves and play out your Demi Moore-in-Ghost fantasies with a big old lump of clay…”
Opening reception: Friday, May 8th from 6-9pm.




























What inspires me? I like to learn new things, see and have life experiences. After which, I go to the studio, work on a sculpture and think about what I’ve watched, done, read, and listened to. Since I visit the studio right after my shift, I also think the sculptures reflect what I call “the madness and the mayhem” of working a New York City graveyard shift where fights, barf, homeless and drunks cyclone the edge. Occasionally after an unusually hectic night at the café I talk to myself as I draw, dig and scrape away at the sculpture.