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Michigan State University

Work of MSU Alums, a Father-Daughter Duo, on Display at SCENE Metrospace

An exhibition at MSU’s SCENE Metrospace features new work by a father-daughter duo, both Michigan State University alums, offering a unique opportunity to see two generations of Spartan artists in dialogue.

Teagan Chatterley, who graduated from MSU with a BFA in 2015, combines her knowledge of sculpture and designed objects to explore quirky objects, social interactions, culture, and the natural world in her sculpting. Her father, Mark Chatterley, who earned his MFA from MSU in 1981, has spent decades developing a body of work centered around ideas of flux, mortality, and transformation.

Two people stand smiling in a gallery. The person on the left has their arm around the person on the right. To the right is a shelf full of small, creature-like sculptures.

These contrasting styles come together in Chatterley²: Intuitive Play, a sculptural series now on display at SCENE Metrospace that explores intergenerational joy through the act of ceramic material creation. The sculptures within the series were created using techniques both old and new. With different firing methods, glazes, sizes, and complexity, the pieces demonstrate a natural shift in sculpting style over time.

The show’s title, Intuitive Play, comes from the playfulness both Mark and Teagan strive to reach within their work, where they allow themselves to lower barriers to creation, and a playfulness they want to share with the viewers. The Zen saying, “A beginner has many possibilities, and an expert has few,” is one that relates to this process as Mark and Teagan aimed to join their different life experiences and meld their ideas.

“Working together helped to inspire and push each of us in different directions that we hadn’t originally intended.”
Teagan Chatterley

“I come from a mindset where bigger is better,” Mark said. “And Teagan goes into the microcosm like a jeweler. Her pieces have a bigger presence than mine. Teagan’s glazes are smooth with bright colors. Compared to my rough and crusty earth-tone glaze.”

Despite the external differences in their work, their creative processes and philosophies are not so different.

“We are both interested in materiality, exploration, and the evolution of our creative processes over time,” Teagan said. “While we approach our work differently, our ability to communicate through creative formats has existed for as long as I can remember. Similarly, the notion of not being afraid to explore and play is something that I was taught throughout my childhood. This notion is one we both try to remember as we work through projects.”

A wide-angle view of a gallery featuring large, textured ceramic sculptures on pedestals and walls. The centerpiece is a tall figure pulling a wheeled creature that is connected to a cluster of small, colorful figurines on the floor.
A picture of an art gallery with wooden floors and white walls displaying a variety of humanoid and animal-like ceramic sculptures.
Three people, one man and two women, looking at a tall, cocoon-shaped sculpture with embedded miniature figures in caves along its surface. The piece stands upright on a black pedestal in the center of a gallery room.

The work Mark and Teagan did for the Intuitive Play exhibit marks the first time they have collaborated. When they began discussing their joint exhibition, they sketched several sculpture concepts. The final works diverged significantly from those early ideas.

“Working together helped to inspire and push each of us in different directions that we hadn’t originally intended,” Teagan said.

A Career in Flux 

Mark Chatterley has worked with clay for more than 40 years, exploring countless techniques, forms, and sizes of sculpture. Yet he found renewed freedom in working with his daughter on Intuitive Play.

A ceramic sculpture of a green creature on four rust-colored wheels displayed on a white pedestal. Atop the creature sits a small, textured yellow and brown figure with wide eyes and pointed ears.
Ceramic textured sculpture of a human figure. The photo shows the head and shoulder of this figure.
A photo of a clay/ceramic bird figure with a tiny creature sitting on its head.
A tall human figure sculpture holding chains that are connected to whimsical, glossy ceramic creatures arranged on a black base. Each has a horned, reptilian form with chains draped across their bodies.
A large ceramic sculpture of a human head on a black pedestal in a gallery. The head is textured with exaggerated facial features and small, colorful creatures embedded in its surface.

“I’ve been working nonstop for 40 years with clay,” he said. “I’ve explored all sorts of techniques and shapes and sizes. And after a while you feel like you’ve pretty much done it all compared to someone who just took their first ceramic class and has no idea what the material can do. Having a whole world of possibilities, that is the trick to keep working.”

Mark’s work consistently returns to heavy themes: life, death, creation, and destruction. Exploring these themes led him to explore the spiritual aspect of humanity. He grew up Catholic but later decided to explore different ideas of spirituality, leading to a deep dive into shamanism and Zen Buddhism.

“For me, it all comes down to an energy in a way to view the world. The work in the exhibit shows a little bit of all those explorations for me in a new way combined with Teagan’s work.”
Mark Chatterley

“For me, it all comes down to an energy in a way to view the world,” he said. “The work in the exhibit shows a little bit of all those explorations for me in a new way combined with Teagan’s work.”

This collaboration created a shift in his work, and working with his daughter allowed Mark to tap into a new sense of creative freedom.

“Her work is just fun, so I had to try and put a little more play into what I was doing, and not take myself so seriously,” he said. “It’s rather a freeing experience.”

A woman taking a picture with her cell phone of a large ceramic sculpture of a human head that is textured with exaggerated facial features and small, colorful creatures embedded in its surface.

For Mark, working with his daughter infused his work with an exciting freshness, and he reflects on the experience with warmth and gratitude.

“I am at the end of my career where Teagan is just beginning,” he said. “Professionally, I would like to share her work with the greater art market. That would bring new life to my practice and hopefully open up doors for her.”

Depicting Human Emotions

For Teagan Chatterley, the creative process is something fluid and driven primarily by instinct.

“My creative process is very dependent on the day and the project,” she said. “Most of the time, I need to begin by working with a material and my hands directly before I know where I am going. Other times, I need to look at the world around me – textures, colors, layers, books – for inspiration, or concepts, then sketch or write out ideas.”

A close-up of a bright orange, spiky ceramic creature with large eyes and an open mouth. It is nestled into an alcove of a tall, gray and blue textured sculpture.
A close-up photo of three brightly colored round weird and silly faces stacked on top of each other, made from clay/ceramic.
A light green, glossy ceramic creature with yellow spike-like hair and wide eyes sits inside a hollowed-out section of a larger sculpture.
Low-angle view of a cluster of whimsical, glossy ceramic creatures arranged on a black base. Each has a horned, reptilian form with chains draped across their bodies. The background shows a tall figure sculpture holding the chains.
A close up of two ceramic figures that appear to be poking their heads out of two ears.

A throughline in all of her work is the attempt to give form to unspoken emotions, social norms, nature, and experiences she has while traveling.

“My current work, while whimsical and silly, is an attempt to depict human emotion, especially those we may not have words for,” she said. “These pieces are able to act out our innermost feelings, ones we may not show in public, ranging from childish delight to disgust.”

“Each new work helps to propel the next one further. These works seem to be a never-ending pathway of fun and ideas, ones which I will continue to explore.”
Teagan Chatterley

For Teagan, the free-from exploration that fueled Intuitive Play is a foundational aspect of her practice, something she learned during her formative years.

“Growing up in a family so deeply involved in the arts allowed me to view art as a necessary part of life,” she said. “I feel really fortunate to have had a childhood deeply ingrained in the art world, a fortune I know many do not get to experience.”

A row of whimsical bird-like sculptures made of textured, metallic-looking material displayed on a white shelf. Each figure has distinct facial expressions and small, upright protrusions resembling antennae or ears.

At MSU, she further honed her passion for art. Here, her advisors introduced her to the field of Industrial Design. This discovery led her to pursue a Master of Design in Designed Objects degree from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

“The art department became my family, and Kresge became my home. I chose to pursue sculpture to develop skill sets with a variety of tools and deep dive into material studies,” she said. “This pathway was essential in my creative development, allowing me to feel limitless in my explorations.”

She continues to follow that curiosity wherever it leads.

“Each new work helps to propel the next one further,” she said. “These works seem to be a never-ending pathway of fun and ideas, ones which I will continue to explore.”

Two people standing smiling in a contemporary gallery. The person on the left has their arm around the person on the right. To the right is a tall, textured sculpture of a human figure holding chains connected to small, creature-like figures on the floor.

For Teagan, showing alongside her father in East Lansing is a powerful emotional milestone.

“I am really excited and honored to be able to exhibit with my dad,” she said. “I can distinctly remember attending my dad’s shows at galleries when I was young, so to be a part of that now is a wild creative full circle. Similarly, to show in the creative community my family has been surrounded by for years, and the amazing people who I grew up around, it feels like a family reunion.”

Chatterley²: Intuitive Play is on display at SCENE Metrospace, located at 110 Charles St. in East Lansing, Michigan, through Sunday, July 27, 2025. 

By Austin Curtis and Kim Popiolek

Story originally published by the College of Arts and Letters

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