Art of the Cup 2024


2023 Art of the Cup Ceramist: Nathalia Toledo, Uggi Pot, 2023, Porcelain, glaze, gold luster, hand built piece with details in slip, painted with glazes and underglazes to show both textures and details in gold luster


October 26 - December 9, 2024

The Center for Southern Craft & Design presents its 17th annual juried exhibition, Art of the Cup. Since its launch, the exhibition has featured over 1,100 cups and teapots created by world-class Southern ceramicists. To celebrate 17 years, Art of the Cup 2024 will be juried by ceramicist Rachel DePauw and exhibited in Ogden Museum Store’s Center for Southern Craft & Design, with the cups and teapots available for purchase.

A reception for the ceramicists will take place during November’s Ogden After Hours on Thursday, November 21 from 6 to 8 p.m.


Art of the Cup 2024 Call for Entries

Wednesday, July 31 – Call for entries open
Friday, September 13 – Call for entries closes
Friday, September 27 –  Selected ceramicists for Art of the Cup 2024 will be notified
Monday, October 14 – Selected ceramicists deadline to send cups and teapots to Ogden Museum
Saturday, October 26 –  Art of the Cup 2024 opens
Thursday, November 21Reception for Art of the Cup 2024 takes place from 6 – 8 p.m.
Monday, December 9Art of the Cup 2024 closes


About the Juror: Rachael DePauw

Photo by Chris Granger for The Times-Picayune | The Advocate

Rachael DePauw, originally from St. Louis, Missouri, is an artist and educator who has run Rachael DePauw Pottery in New Orleans for over 10 years. She and her husband, William, create a variety of artwork such as dinnerware, decorative pieces, ceramic jewelry and house number plaques. She has created pieces for Mignon Faget’s HIVE collection, been featured in Garden & Gun, and was recently awarded a 2021 grant from The Studio Potter. You can find Rachael DePauw Pottery for sale at various locations such as her home studio, The Historic New Orleans Collection, Ogden Museum of Southern Art and at occasional Southern craft festivals like Jazz and Heritage Festival. Rachael taught at Isidore Newman School from 2009-2019, and William currently teaches in the Art Department at Tulane University.

DePauw earned a Bachelor’s in Political Economy from Tulane University in 2007. She surprisingly discovered a passion for ceramics during her junior year while fulfilling a required arts credit. Following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, Newcomb College was merged into Tulane University. DePauw was one of the last students who was able to receive an official degree from the H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College.

DePauw continues to be influenced by the aesthetic and philosophic concepts associated with New Orleans’ Newcomb Pottery tradition. Attempting to modernize the historic enterprise through a process called Sgraffito, she creates bold relief patterns and uses design motifs referencing Louisiana’s indigenous flora. On the pre-fired vessel, DePauw paints a thin layer of black, liquid clay before using a small tool to carve through the slip, revealing the white clay beneath. The linear and abstract patterns created reflect the South’s unique landscape and reference the blue and greenish wares of the Newcomb Pottery that was produced from 1895 to 1940.