Norton Museum of Art 2025 Gala Auction | Hosted by Sotheby’s
Norton Museum of Art 2025 Gala Auction | Hosted by Sotheby’s
Render: Lyon Silk Dots
Estimate
15,000 - 20,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Molly Hatch
b. 1978
Render: Lyon Silk Dots
Executed in 2013.
Signed and dated
Porcelain plates, handpainted with glaze
Overall: 28 x 30 x 2 in. (71.1 x 76.2 x 5.1 cm)
Please note that while this auction is hosted on Sothebys.com, it is being administered by the Norton Museum of Art (the “Norton”), and all post-sale matters (inclusive of invoicing and property pickup/shipment) will be handled by the Norton. As such, Sotheby’s will share the contact details for the winning bidders with the Norton so that they may be in touch directly post-sale.
This online benefit auction has a 10% buyer’s premium, which will be added to the final hammer price of each sold work. The premium allows the Norton Museum or Art to retain more of the proceeds of the sale and offset administrative costs. Auction proceeds benefit the Norton's curatorial, learning, and community engagement programs.
Courtesy of Todd Merrill Studio
- Exhibited at the Clayarch Gimhae Museum in Gimhae, Korea in 2013
- Exhibited at Todd Merrill Studio Southampton Gallery in Summer 2018
Molly Hatch's work subtly challenges long-held gender dynamics. Traditionally, women's contributions in design have been labeled as "craft," overshadowed by men's "fine art." Hatch subverts this by using ceramic plates as a symbol of feminine domesticity to showcase typically male-dominated patterns, thereby elevating craft to fine art. Her thoughtful work underscores that her choice of "canvas" is as deliberate and significant as her imagery.
Hatch grew up on an organic dairy farm in Vermont surrounded by a startlingly diverse set of visual influences: the earthy reality of rural life, and the mysterious luxury of antique decorative objects in her family's collection. Her mother's family, prosperous Boston merchants, used Chinese export porcelain as ballast in their ships. Inspired by these two seemingly disparate family narratives, Hatch became an artist with a life-long passion for the decorative arts and the dialog between old and new.
In 2013, Hatch had a solo museum exhibition at the Philadelphia Art Alliance and was included in "New Blue and White," a contemporary decorative arts exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.
Physic Garden, a monumental site-specific 456-plate work, was installed in the entryway of the High Museum of Art in Atlanta in 2014. The work was commissioned by the museum and used two ca.1755 Chelsea Porcelain Factory plates from the museum's Frances and Emory Cocke Collection of English Ceramics as inspiration for its floral motif. Another commission, Caughly Landscape, was installed at the Woodruff Arts Center in Atlanta.
In 2017, Hatch installed her largest museum commission to date, titled Repertoire, in the historic Engelhard Court at the Newark Museum of Art in Newark, New Jersey. Honoring the museum's 107-year-tradition of collecting contemporary ceramic art, and commemorating the retirement of Curator of Decorative Arts Ulysses Dietz after 37 years, the three parts of the installation were inspired by global textiles in the Museum's collection. The western panel, "Dyula Woven," is based on a rare early-twentieth-century Dyula textile from Cote d'Ivoire, collected by the Museum's founder, John Cotton Dana, in 1928. The central panel, "Qianlong Silk," is based on a velvet throne carpet made in eighteenth-century China. The eastern niche will be filled with "Bergen Jacquard," designed after a jacquard-woven blue and white coverlet made in Bergen County, New Jersey in the 1840s. Repertoire combines the iconography of the two great global art-forms of human creativity: clay and cloth.
In 2022, Hatch took part in Making Place Matter, a three person exhibition, symposium, and publication inaugurating the new building of Philadelphia's The Clay Studio, made possible by a grant from the Pew Center for Arts and Heritage. Hatch created a new body of work for the exhibition centered around the concept of Making Place Matter through a pattern exploration of her personal heritage.
Hatch's monumental work Dulcere, a 20 foot wide ceramic triptych, was created as a focal point of The Montreal Art Museum's groundbreaking exhibition Parall(elles) A History of Women in Design. Organized in collaboration with the Stewart Program for Modern Design, this major exhibition celebrated the instrumental role women have played in the world of design through a rich corpus of art works and objects dating from the mid-19th century onwards. In addition, it examined the reasons why women are underrepresented in the history of this discipline and encourages an expanded understanding of what constitutes design. The 3 paneled work of hand painted plates is based on a pair of Asian-inspired Minton cloisonné ware, designed by Christopher Dresser, c.1870.
Amalgam, specifically crafted in 2024 for the Sarasota Art Museum, spans two floors and comprises over 450 hand-painted earthenware plates in white, blue, and gold luster, arranged to create a cohesive ensemble framed by arched windows. Drawing inspiration from historical ceramics worldwide, including Ming-dynasty Hanap vessels, Moroccan Fassi ware, Dutch Delft vases, Mexican Talavera panels, and Japanese-inspired English ceramics, Hatch creates a cross-cultural narrative that underscores centuries-old global trade networks and shared aesthetics. The monumental work strategically incorporates empty spaces to highlight lines and patterns between adjacent plates, inviting viewers to engage with the composition from various vantage points. Through her meticulous research and critical practice, Hatch contributes to the elevation of fine art ceramics to a level on par with painting and sculpture.