News — joanne cooke
Best Friends Exhibition 2025
Best Friends Exhibition
1 November - 31 December 2025
What is a best friend?
Someone or something you can rely on? We invited 8 artists to respond to the brief and the outcomes are wide ranging and engaging with wit, delight, enchantment and sentiment.
We are pleased to say that charm and joy pervade the exhibition - which is exactly its intent. You can discover not only cats and dogs but also horses, donkeys, birds, an anteater, an okapi and many more. Each sculpture is beautifully crafted in form and material.
All the exhibits are for immediate sale, but be aware that we sell from the wall, so hurry.

Ceramicist Helen Higgins
Helen Higgins is a prize winning ceramicist, nationally renowned for her humorous ceramics. Her pieces are individually hand built employing slab, coil, pinch and modelling techniques, to create her characters. She loves dressing her animals up in costumes - creating animal hybrids with anthropomorphic vibes.

“I endeavour to explore how we sometimes try to hide our true selves behind a façade, masking our own vulnerabilities by pretending or taking on other characteristics, with the intention of increasing self-esteem and confidence."

Her busy studio and teaching practice is based in south Wales.

Figurative Ceramicist Jean Tolkovosky
Surrey based ceramicist Jean Tolkovsky, is a nationally renowned sculptor specialising in figurative work. Her sculptures are each unique pieces inspired by myths, novels and childhood memories. The dream-like quality of her work is achieved not only in the form, but also in the sensitive rendering of the glazes and mark making.

Jean's masked and anthropomorphic figures reveal a fascination and intrigue to the multiple facets of the human persona. Her aim is to suggest the narrative, whilst leaving a space for further contemplation by the viewer.

Jean Tolkovsky's sculptures are collected around the world.


Mixed-Media Artist Gemma Rees
Gemma Rees is a Sussex based artist specialising in creating highly textured canine sculptures.

After a career as a professional graphic designer, she experimented with 3D materials and from there her passion for making animal sculptures grew. Her specialism is dogs and how their quirky characters evolve through the process of doing a drawing, making a wire armature and then working with paper clay and resin to create the surface. Some sculptures are very labour intensive, taking weeks to build. Her aim is not to shape a realistic canine, but instead interpret its personality through the materials and gestural form.

Wildlife Ceramicist Elaine Peto
Elaine Peto has spent a lifetime being inspired by the natural world. From her studio in Hampshire she studies animal behaviour, their forms and characteristics. Elaine's portfolio includes ceramic sculptures of farm and wild animals and even sea creatures. She specialises in creating one-off pieces using textured stoneware and porcelain clay.

“ My aim is to capture the essence of the beast”

Animal Ceramicist Joanne Cooke
Yorkshire based, Joanne Cooke has spent the last 25 years sharing her love of animals by creating life-like ceramic sculptures. Her primary fascination is with dogs and their captivating characters and playful natures. Each pose and facial expression is carefully worked in clay until it conveys the essence of the animal.

Joanne individually sculpts each dog out of stoneware clay, then decorates them with a combination of matt underglaze and shiny top glaze.


Ceramicist Emma Rowley
Yorkshire based ceramicist, Emily Rowley, creates charming sculptures that aim to make you smile. Through building the form in stoneware clay she imbues character by the application of textures and pattern. Each piece is a delightful statement that brings humour and cheer.


"The ceramics I make, through pattern and personality, evoke feelings of nostalgia and cosiness. They comfort you like an old friend coming round for a cuppa".
Ceramicist Christy Keeney
Internationally renowned sculptor, Christy Keeney, studied ceramics at the Royal College of Art in London. After spending 17 years in London, Christy returned to his native Donegal where he now lives and works with his family.

His sculptures have a strong narrative quality that invites you to contemplate the story behind the work. He sculpts and draws into slabs of wet clay creating heads and disjointed figures that investigate the human condition.

His forms often extend to the point where sculpture and drawing meld. He uses washes of colour to denote mood and atmosphere, whilst sometimes opting for a monochromatic palette to heighten the form's impact.
Miniaturist Ceramicist Andrew Bull
Kent based sculptor Andrew Bull specialises in making quirky porcelain miniatures. His light-hearted approach captures the essence of humour in everyday situations: whether walking the dog or hanging out the washing. Each animated character tells a story that engages and delights. For Andrew, a best friend doesn't have to be an animal or person, it can also be a car or a bag of golf clubs - always there when you need it!
Andrew uses rolled and slab building techniques to carefully create each sculpture by hand, adding lustres and enamels to highlight key accents.


