logo
Raina Lee's artwork from tree-house studio to high-end galleries appealing

Raina Lee's artwork from tree-house studio to high-end galleries appealing

Gulf Today29-04-2025

To get to ceramist Raina Lee's tree house, you enter through an iron gate with a dog warning sign and climb a long wooden staircase that creaks beneath your feet. You'll then cross a suspension bridge, and you'll hear, 'Be careful, it's very wobbly,' before seeing Lee, 48.
There, you'll likely find her with a mug in hand, leaning against the door frame of her tree house and waiting for you to join her at a Japanese-style tea table. Her serene retreat feels like a cabin in a national park, yet it's perched on a slope in Lee's Mount Washington backyard, shaded by Brazilian pepper trees.
The studio is home to dozens of her ceramic works, available for viewing by appointment.
Lee's pieces range from small tea bowls ($640) to large moon jars ($4,800), and her works can be found at high-end galleries such as Rhett Baruch in Hollywood and Verso in New York. For Mother's Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas and other holidays, she has sales of smaller, more affordable wares. Every year, Lee's family members get 'Christmas ceramics' as gifts from her.
'I tried to give vases and cups to my aunt, but she doesn't use them,' she says. 'She put them on top of her fireplace to display. I'm like, 'You know you can just use them. It's not that valuable.''
Some of ceramicist Raina Lee's creations line the shelves in her tree house.
Modesty aside, Lee's artistic journey began 'by accident' in 2016 in Brooklyn, N.Y., where she was living next door to Choplet, a ceramics studio and gallery. That's where she began making pottery. After switching to a 24-hour studio called Clay Space, Lee and friend Minh Singer spent countless night sessions together. 'We would bicycle and somehow meet somewhere on the way, 'Goonies'-style, and then ride over to the studio at night and stay until 4 a.m.,'
Singer says. 'She was very experimental and funky at night, and at daytime, she would throw and do more technique.' Lee, a former journalist who covered the tech and gaming industries, says she found satisfaction in the way ceramics allowed her to create 'tangible objects from start to finish.'
When she transitioned to ceramics full-time, her family thought she was 'really crazy,' she says. Lee, the daughter of Taiwanese immigrants, grew up in Rancho Palos Verdes. She says that art wasn't a common pursuit in her family and that perhaps the closest thing she got to witness was her grandma's occasional hobby of traditional Chinese painting. 'But I think I'm old enough now where no one is questioning that kind of stuff,' Lee says.
'Maybe if I were 20, that would have happened. But now, it's like nobody cares.' While living in New York, Lee joined a glaze-mixing class at Greenwich House Pottery, which sparked her interest in creating her own. After moving back to Los Angeles in 2017, Lee was able to expand her ceramics possibilities. She and her architect husband, Mark Watanabe, bought a house, which Watanabe remodeled along with the tree house. In her studio, Lee has placed her kilns and pottery wheel and tried alternative firing techniques such as raku and pit firing.
Raina J. Lee builds a ceramic piece by hand in her studio garage.
Photos: Tribune News Service
Having a home studio has made it easier for Lee to experiment with pottery glazes. She's most proud of her volcanic glazes; they are applied before pottery pieces are fired in a kiln for four to 12 hours. The result? Unique crackly textures that are uneven to the touch, either bumpy or pitted, much like craters on the moon. Because her glazes are formulated with minerals, she jokingly says her works 'end up looking like rocks again.'
'For example, when you look at oyster shells, they have an iridescence of pearly green and blue, and that's definitely from minerals like copper,' she says. 'I just find it interesting that it's the same materials recombined into something else, because everything in the earth is sort of like one thing.' Nature is Lee's main source of inspiration. When she's not throwing clay on a wheel or hand-building clay pieces in her studio, she is in the wilderness around the country going on hikes and finding inspiration, which she posts about on Instagram, in addition to posts about her ceramics work and shows.
Ted Vadakan, a friend of 20 years, says Lee often takes reference photos along the way and uses her watercolor to paint what she saw and what inspires her at the end of each day of hiking. 'She's always observing things normal people don't see,' says Vadakan. 'She'll be on the bluffs of the ocean and notice all the moss and lichen growing in different volcanic rock formations. I think all those textures and colors that she sees are very apparent in her works.'
Lee's experimentation with sculptural glazes and alternative firing techniques has gained the attention of art dealers and curators such as Claire Vinson and Philip Williams of Stroll Garden, a Los Angeles-based gallery for contemporary ceramics and sculpture, particularly works by female artists. Vinson and Williams featured Lee's work in their inaugural exhibition in 2021, and they will host her new show next month. The exhibition, which opens Nov. 9, will feature works inspired by Lee's summer studio residency and gallery visits in Paris.
'She seems to know everybody,' says Vinson, adding that Lee's solo show brought a variety of new faces to the gallery. 'She's so well connected and engaged with the ceramics world and the art world in L.A.
'Raina has an openness to her that I think is really central to how her work evolves over time,' Vinson adds. 'She's not afraid of results that might seem weird or unintentional or look like mistakes. She takes it all in stride.'
At 'Calibration,' a group exhibition in June at the LaiSun Keane gallery in Boston, Lee presented four 3D-printed pieces: three Chun meiping vases, which were popular forms during China's Song dynasty, and one 'Tetris'-inspired piece of cong pottery, based on a Chinese Bronze Age form.
Having grown up in a house with traditional Chinese furniture and decor, Lee says she's exceedingly intrigued by ceramics from the Song dynasty (960-1279).
'A lot of the best glaze innovations were during the Song dynasty, which was a thousand years ago,' she says. 'I was trying to re-create different Song dynasty glazes, and I've been able to make similar ones. So I'm interested in exploring that as a way for me to personally time-travel and understand what that history was like.'
Tribune News Service

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

OMEGA Reveals Aqua Terra 30 mm Collection in Kyoto
OMEGA Reveals Aqua Terra 30 mm Collection in Kyoto

Web Release

time3 hours ago

  • Web Release

OMEGA Reveals Aqua Terra 30 mm Collection in Kyoto

An Evening of Discovery The evening began with guests gathering on the venue's observation deck as twilight descended over Kyoto's ancient skyline. OMEGA President and CEO Raynald Aeschlimann welcomed attendees, highlighting the collection's significance 'We've created timepieces that transition effortlessly from day to night, complementing any outfit or occasion while maintaining the highest technical standards,' Aeschlimann noted. 'This collection represents our response to the growing demand for versatile watches, all at a smaller scale.' Secrets Revealed As night fell over Kyoto, guests moved through a sensory journey through cascading voile screens created passages of discovery, gradually revealing the collection's twelve distinct expressions unveiling the 'my little secret' campaign theme. Throughout the evening, guests engaged with a series of interactive installations that blended traditional Japanese artistry with contemporary expression, from confessional-style photo booths to live Shodo calligraphy demonstrations. Stars Align in Kyoto The event brought together five of the six 'my little secret' campaign ambassadors, with model, entrepreneur, and advocate Ashley Graham, K-pop star Danielle Marsh, Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Tems, Academy Award-winning actress and performer Ariana DeBose and BAFTA-winning actress Marisa Abela, all joining the celebration against the historic setting. The international gathering also welcomed notable talents from around the world, including the OMEGA Friends of the Brand, Karla Souza and Aislinn Derbez of Mexico and Yuriko Yoshitaka from Japan, as well as the actresses Orm Kornnaphat from Thailand, Maria Pedraza of Spain, Yara Shahidi from the USA, Italian TV presenter Melissa Satta and the German content creator, Lena Mantler. The Aqua Terra 30 mm collection will be available in OMEGA boutiques and online from 19th June 2025.

Inside CHAR x Around The Block, Nad Al Sheba's newest grill bar concept
Inside CHAR x Around The Block, Nad Al Sheba's newest grill bar concept

What's On

time20 hours ago

  • What's On

Inside CHAR x Around The Block, Nad Al Sheba's newest grill bar concept

Roll out the red carpet for we have a new chip on the block. CHAR is the latest venture by homegrown, Emirati-owned concept Around The Block, known and loved for its high-quality, handcrafted specialty coffee and a new avatar with every opening. The latest transformation is all about flames and fire-fuelled flavours, drawing inspiration from global classics and pairing it with a Dubai story. Located in the brand new Nad Al Sheba Mall, the space offers, a sleek, minimal experience, stripped down to bare brown tiles, smooth wooden furniture, low yellow lighting and the centre of all the action – the exposed grill, firing up your dishes for you. The grilled varieties come from all parts of the world, incorporating Asian and Middle Eastern influences – perhaps the hotbeds of open-flame cooking. Think chicken shawarma, chicken tikka, tenderloin, sea bass and more, all flame-kissed and served with a variety of cold plates and sides designed to complement the depth of smoke and char with bright, light flavours. Everything is bold, refreshing, rich and packs an indulgent punch. What's new? The space functions in a unique way – by day it is the Around The Block we all know and love, serving specialty coffees, comfort dining and that light, daytime atmosphere. After 2pm is when the heat and speed picks up, and CHAR is brought to life. You start with freshly-baked bread, finish with smoky, specialty non-alcoholic drinks, savoury tender meats and a fitting end – something sweet. It's the perfect day-to-night transformation, much like ATB's other concepts – The Kitchen by Around The Block in Wasl 51, and TŌRI at Al Khawaneej Walk, turning into a modern Japanese eatery in a Cinderella-esque fashion. CHAR x Around The Block, Nad Al Sheba Mall, now open, daily, 7am to 2pm, 2pm till late, @charconcept, @aroundtheblock Images: Supplied > Sign up for FREE to get exclusive updates that you are interested in

Pakistani Actress Sanam Saeed Announces Birth of Son
Pakistani Actress Sanam Saeed Announces Birth of Son

UAE Moments

timea day ago

  • UAE Moments

Pakistani Actress Sanam Saeed Announces Birth of Son

Pakistani celebrity couple Sanam Saeed and Mohib Mirza announced the birth of their son on Friday, June 20, through social media. The couple shared the news in an Instagram post, revealing that they have named their son Vali Hasan Mirza, and he was born on May 18, 2025. The caption for the post read, "Our hearts are full. With love, wonder, and the tiniest little fingers, we welcome our son Vali Hasan Mirza into the world surrounded by love. All that is by the will of Allah — there is no power except through Him. Please keep our little one in your duas.' Saeed announced the pregnancy in a Mother's Day post, paying tribute to her late mother. The actress and Mohib Mirza have kept their relationship under wraps mostly and announced their marriage in 2023.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store