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Polia Pillin (1909-1992)

Two glazed ceramic plates, mid-20th century
Each signed to underside: Pillin
One depicting a lady, the other depicting three horses and two ladies
2 pieces
Single lady: 2" H x 7.625" Dia.; Horses: 2.25" H x 8.75" W x 8.625" D, irregular

  • Provenance:
    Property from a private collection, San Antonio, TX

    Polia Pillin (1909-1992) was an American ceramic artist whose painted earthenware vessels became an important part of the mid-century California studio pottery movement. She was born in Ukraine but grew up in Chicago. She later moved to Los Angeles during her school years and, in the 1940s, studied at the Los Angeles County Art Institute (now Otis College of Art and Design). By the 1950s, she had developed the hand-painted earthenware vessels that define her career. Working primarily in vases, chargers, bowls, and bottle forms, she used the clay surface as a ground for stylized figural imagery: women, musicians, horses, animals, and symbolic scenes. Using a palette of turquoise, ochre, rust, soft greens, and earthy neutrals, Pillin transformed traditional vessel forms into painterly surfaces that feel intimate, folkloric, and highly personal. Her work was exhibited and sold in California galleries and regional exhibitions during the postwar studio pottery movement and remains closely associated with mid-century Los Angeles ceramics.
  • Condition: Each overall good condition with shelf wear, scattered minor scuffs, and inherent firing flaws commensurate with age. The single lady with a hairline glaze crack across center of bowl and continuing through center of underside.

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March 24, 2026 10:00 AM PDT
Monrovia, CA, US

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