Existing between worlds requires navigating the projections of others while simultaneously constructing one’s own reality. As a mixed-race Black woman, I inhabit a liminal space, negotiating the tension between presence and erasure, legibility and distortion. This state of in-betweenness is both an existential condition and the conceptual foundation of my work. In a world resistant to the complexities of identity, clay becomes a site of refusal, fluid yet resolute, defying rigid classification. My coiling process is both meditative and declarative, a rhythm of making that asserts agency through accumulation. The resulting forms function as psychological thresholds, unsettling perception and inviting a deeper interrogation of what is seen versus what is assumed.

My work engages with personal and collective histories, confronting racial hierarchies and the imposed constraints of identity. My ceramic forms hover at the edge of legibility, oscillating between presence and absence, intention and ambiguity. The deliberate removal of my hand gestures toward the historical erasure of mixed-race bodies. Yet what remains is not absence but a subtle imprint, a material trace that lingers in space, demanding recognition through its refusal to disappear.

I work in black and white, with gradients in between. This seemingly reductive palette mirrors the societal binaries projected onto me. Yet within these formal constraints, contradiction emerges. The starkness of the palette destabilizes perception, inverting the gaze back onto the viewer and implicating them in the act of interpretation. This interplay of simplicity and complexity mirrors the paradox of identity itself, a construct both fixed and mutable, imposed yet self-determined.

Radical acceptance through radical clarity. Complex form, firm foundation, rippling surface. These contrasts do not resolve but coalesce, reinforcing and destabilizing in equal measure. Like the body’s capacity to absorb and withstand, my work embodies endurance. Each misreading layers upon the last, fortifying the form in its persistence. The work does not simply occupy space; it shapes and reverberates through it, existing beyond the moment of encounter.

What if we relinquished the need for fixed meaning and instead embraced perpetual redefinition? In a world where interpretation is always in flux, I extend an invitation to enter the work, to inhabit its ambiguity, and to confront the discomfort of not knowing. The work belongs as much to the viewer as it does to me, existing in the interstitial space of perception. Through this engagement, transformation occurs, not as a finite resolution but as an ongoing process of becoming.

BIO:

Bianca MacPherson is primarily a ceramic artist but considers her practice interdisciplinary, utilizing photography, abstracted photographic practices, materials such as wood, plexiglass, installation, and fibers, building up installation elements alongside her ceramic work. She received her MFA from The Pennsylvania State University (May 2025) and graduated with her BFA in ceramics from Buffalo State University in 2022. Bianca's work has been exhibited and published nationally, most recently in I Like Your Work Podcast MFA Catalog edition 2024. Bianca’s work was selected to be featured on The Color Network's Coalescence poster for NCECA, 2024. Selected exhibitions include Small Favors, 2024 at The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; the 2024 NCECA National Juried Student Art Exhibition at The Visual Arts Center of Richmond, Richmond, Virginia; Art Craft in Media, 2023 at The Burchfield Penney Arts Center, Buffalo, New York; 2nd Annual CIRCA Exhibition, 2023 at The University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado; and The Annual National Juried Art Exhibition, 2023 at The Academy Center of the Arts, Lynchburg, Virginia. She has participated in workshops and residencies at Penland School of Craft, Watershed Center for Ceramic Arts, and Haystack Mountain School of Craft. Her work will be exhibited in her upcoming solo exhibition TenderHead in March 2025 at the Edwin W. Zoller Gallery, State College, Pennsylvania.

Bianca continues advocacy and the discussion around the intersections of nuanced identities as a co-organizer for the Re-Mixed residency in June 2025 at Watershed Center for the Ceramic Arts in Newcastle, Maine.