Emily Counts, Shifting Circling Hover Moth, Glazed stoneware, brass, epoxy clay, Flashe paint, 26.5 x 17 x 2 in
Emily Counts creates mixed-media sculptures and installations that engage craft traditions while exploring femininity, matriarchal identity, memory, and nature. Through the pairing of contrasting materials-ceramics, wood, fabrics, electrical components, glass, and plastics-she builds relationships between disparate textures and surfaces, seeking balance between hard and soft, opaque and transparent. In works that incorporate ceramics with colored light or translucent materials, she merges nostalgia and historical aesthetics with a contemporary, sometimes futuristic sensibility.
Many of Counts's works are figurative and autobiographical. Ceramic busts and life-size figures, often dressed in carefully detailed garments, serve as composite representations of influential women in her life, particularly those from her matrilineal heritage who have passed away. Physical details such as hairstyles, patterned clothing, and bodily stance reference these individuals directly. Her surreal, commanding female figures explore the tension between visibility and vulnerability, and what it means to take up space. Their strength is defined not through violence or domination, but through tenderness and resilience.
Cycles of transformation in nature also inform her work, with recurring motifs of wilting flowers, ripe fruit, and otherworldly animal companions symbolizing renewal, decay, and consciousness. Her shift between human and animal forms reflects a curiosity about inner life, empathy, and the unknown or mysterious aspects of non-human experience. Drawing from childhood memories of textiles, typography, and vintage illustration, Counts traces enduring visual obsessions while using memory as a foundation. Her work ultimately suggests open-ended narratives that invite viewers into shared meaning and personal reflection.