Spiraling (green gloss) Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Spiraling (green gloss)
Spiraling (green gloss) 2023
Spiraling (green gloss)Natalie O'LoughlinSpiraling (green gloss)
Spiraling (green gloss)2023
glazed earthenware
47 x 31 x 28 cm
SOLD 
Beneath the surface (wet season) Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Beneath the surface (wet season)
Beneath the surface (wet season) 2023
Beneath the surface (wet season)Natalie O'LoughlinBeneath the surface (wet season)
Beneath the surface (wet season)2023
glazed stoneware
39 x 33 x 33 cm
$880  ENQUIRE
Afloat (sky gloss) Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Afloat (sky gloss)
Afloat (sky gloss) 2023
Afloat (sky gloss)Natalie O'LoughlinAfloat (sky gloss)
Afloat (sky gloss)2023
glazed earthenware
55 x 19 x 19 cm
$770  ENQUIRE
Wishing well (study) Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Wishing well (study)
Wishing well (study) 2023
Wishing well (study)Natalie O'LoughlinWishing well (study)
Wishing well (study)2023
glazed earthenware
29 x 32 x 23 cm
SOLD 
Jewel (moss) Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Jewel (moss)
Jewel (moss) 2023
Jewel (moss)Natalie O'LoughlinJewel (moss)
Jewel (moss)2023
glazed stoneware
35 x 15 x 15 cm
SOLD 
Echo (gloss) Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Echo (gloss)
Echo (gloss) 2023
Echo (gloss)Natalie O'LoughlinEcho (gloss)
Echo (gloss)2023
glazed earthenware
48 x 16 x 16 cm
SOLD 
Blue ring Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Blue ring
Blue ring 2023
Blue ringNatalie O'LoughlinBlue ring
Blue ring2023
glazed earthenware
55 x 19 x 19 cm
SOLD 
Echo (stone) Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Echo (stone)
Echo (stone) 2023
Echo (stone)Natalie O'LoughlinEcho (stone)
Echo (stone)2023
glazed stoneware
40 x 15 x 15 cm
SOLD 
Swan (pewter) Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Swan (pewter)
Swan (pewter) 2023
Swan (pewter)Natalie O'LoughlinSwan (pewter)
Swan (pewter)2023
glazed stoneware
58 x 20 x 20 cm
SOLD 
Swan (lake) Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Swan (lake)
Swan (lake) 2023
Swan (lake)Natalie O'LoughlinSwan (lake)
Swan (lake)2023
glazed earthenware
57 x 19 x 19 cm
SOLD 
Wishing well Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Wishing well
Wishing well 2023
Wishing wellNatalie O'LoughlinWishing well
Wishing well2023
glazed stoneware
31 x 42 x 31 cm
SOLD 
Echo (satin) Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - Echo (satin)
Echo (satin) 2023
Echo (satin)Natalie O'LoughlinEcho (satin)
Echo (satin)2023
glazed stoneware
57 x 15 x 15 cm
$880  ENQUIRE
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me' Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me' 2023
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'Natalie O'LoughlinINSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'2023
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me' Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me' 2023
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'Natalie O'LoughlinINSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'2023
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me' Natalie O'Loughlin Natalie O'Loughlin - INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me' 2023
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'Natalie O'LoughlinINSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'
INSTALLATION VIEW 'Repeat After Me'2023

A show of hands

Hands are things we notice in others, on which we place great reliance as an indicator of character: like the face, they are prime areas for the expression of individuality. The human hand acts as an information superhighway to our fifth sense, touch. And with the eye in tow, the hand is our main source of contact with our physical environment–they can see around corners, and in the dark–they can function at a distance from our bodies; so ubiquitous with the involvement of human affairs. They are a huge part of our communication system; and in the extent to which they are used to communicate, not only words but emotions and ideas, our hands are so unique to each of us. Reach within.

Sitting in Natalie’s studio, discussing the material and immaterial, we talked a lot about things left unsaid. While we were talking about unsaid things, I noticed the wordless things Natalie was saying through the presence of her hands. With each word she spoke, a gesture from the hand accompanied it–her translator. The word ‘leaning’ was relieved by her finger touching her thumb in a loop; the word ‘collecting’, by percussive pats on her palm; and the word puzzle’, a mellow fist: A secret sign language of Natalies insides, wordlessly sculpting the air before me. No activity demands more of the hands than to reveal how it mirrors our internal worlds. Being in the presence of Natalies vessels I realised the ineffable capabilities of the unlimited ways she handles her busy mind in the flow of action. Her hand on clay is a comradery born out of her need to knead; a companionship of languages in simpatico.

What I like about Natalie's work is not only how we can see the hand exhuming the mind–dimpled gestures grasped in action by way of contemplation– but how we can see the whole body too. The height of the vessels profiling the lengths of her arms; the oblique curvature echoing her posture at work; the moods she weathers in the lusty yet earthy, sheeny yet matte glazes and the visceral convolutions of colour in teamwork with her inner thoughts and feelings. All portraying a person whose lively hands are a product of a lively mind. Because of this, Natalies vessels remind me that all our bodies serve as arenas for our nerves and feelings; like them, we don't blend into carpentry, or hang on walls, we’re upright and present– living vessels–all handling our raucous insides one gesture at a time.

Opposite each other, Natalie pulled a glaze test pebble from her pocket. Sitting in her palm she said, want to see it? But the words she didn't say, hands cupping mine, want to feel it? I was in her hands.

Emma Finneran

Natalie O’Loughlin (she/ her) is a multidisciplinary artist living and working on Gadigal Country/ Sydney, her work examines the potential of the ceramic container as a conduit for our thoughts and ideas.

Natalie’s work responds to memory, materiality and the paradox of failure, unravelling her past and the world around her. The practice of working with clay is one of unlearning, and accepting disappointment as a part of the process. Natalie’s vessels are an exercise in seeing defeat as potential and reconsidering the intrinsic value of the function.

A show of hands

Hands are things we notice in others, on which we place great reliance as an indicator of character: like the face, they are prime areas for the expression of individuality. The human hand acts as an information superhighway to our fifth sense, touch. And with the eye in tow, the hand is our main source of contact with our physical environment–they can see around corners, and in the dark–they can function at a distance from our bodies; so ubiquitous with the involvement of human affairs. They are a huge part of our communication system; and in the extent to which they are used to communicate, not only words but emotions and ideas, our hands are so unique to each of us. Reach within.

Sitting in Natalie’s studio, discussing the material and immaterial, we talked a lot about things left unsaid. While we were talking about unsaid things, I noticed the wordless things Natalie was saying through the presence of her hands. With each word she spoke, a gesture from the hand accompanied it–her translator. The word ‘leaning’ was relieved by her finger touching her thumb in a loop; the word ‘collecting’, by percussive pats on her palm; and the word puzzle’, a mellow fist: A secret sign language of Natalies insides, wordlessly sculpting the air before me. No activity demands more of the hands than to reveal how it mirrors our internal worlds. Being in the presence of Natalies vessels I realised the ineffable capabilities of the unlimited ways she handles her busy mind in the flow of action. Her hand on clay is a comradery born out of her need to knead; a companionship of languages in simpatico.

What I like about Natalie's work is not only how we can see the hand exhuming the mind–dimpled gestures grasped in action by way of contemplation– but how we can see the whole body too. The height of the vessels profiling the lengths of her arms; the oblique curvature echoing her posture at work; the moods she weathers in the lusty yet earthy, sheeny yet matte glazes and the visceral convolutions of colour in teamwork with her inner thoughts and feelings. All portraying a person whose lively hands are a product of a lively mind. Because of this, Natalies vessels remind me that all our bodies serve as arenas for our nerves and feelings; like them, we don't blend into carpentry, or hang on walls, we’re upright and present– living vessels–all handling our raucous insides one gesture at a time.

Opposite each other, Natalie pulled a glaze test pebble from her pocket. Sitting in her palm she said, want to see it? But the words she didn't say, hands cupping mine, want to feel it? I was in her hands.

Emma Finneran

Natalie O'Loughlin

Born 1990, Gimuy/ Cairns, QLD

    EDUCATION

    2019

    • Bachelor of Design, UNSW Art & Design, Sydney, NSW

    2013

    • Cert II in Printing and Graphic Arts (Screen Printing), Ultimo Tafe, Sydney, NSW

    2012

    • Diploma of Applied Fashion and Design Technology, Ultimo Tafe, Sydney NS

    SOLO EXHIBITIONS

    2023

    • 'Repeat After Me', EDWINA CORLETTE, Brisbane

    2022

    • 'Holding Voids', Scratch Art Space, Marrickville, NSW

    GROUP EXHIBITIONS

    2022

    • End of Year Show, Leichardt, NSW
    • Cut n Polish, Carriageworks, Eveleigh, NSW

    2019

    • Open Living Room, Private Residence, Bondi NSW
    • Finding New Ways of Becoming Old Friends, Three Foot Square, UNSW Art & Design NSW

    1 – 21 May 2024
    Natalie O'Loughlin ‘Strange Altars’

    7 – 21 December 2023
    SMALL WORKS - Click and Collection

    24 May 2023 – 13 June 2023
    Natalie O'Loughlin ‘Repeat After Me’