Contemporary Applied Arts Gallery

Contemporary Applied Arts Gallery Contemporary Applied Arts has championed and promoted excellence in British craft since 1948. Paramount to everything we do is the act of making.
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We are a registered charity and membership gallery that represents some of the most talented and skilled applied artists working in Britain today. Contemporary Applied Arts, often called CAA, was established in 1948 to support and encourage the making of fine crafts in Britain – and to keep them firmly in the public eye. We are a membership organisation and support our members in various ways. Thi

s includes a programme of innovative and thoughtfully curated exhibitions, retail activities and a bespoke commissioning service. CAA currently represents around 200 designer makers, spanning the entire spectrum of the applied arts. Our Marylebone gallery shows a diverse and frequently-changing selection of one-off work, ranging from decorative to functional pieces and including ceramics, glass, furniture, jewellery, metalwork, textiles, wood and paper. Our members often use ancient, traditional skills, many of which are in danger of being lost forever. With experience and creative vision, these skills are interpreted by the makers and expressed in their own unique voice and in contemporary idiom. The results are often both stunning and thought-provoking. All of our highly-skilled makers are based in the UK and have been selected for membership by a panel of their peers. To become a CAA member, makers must demonstrate excellent knowledge of their material and exceptional skill in making. They must also produce work of the highest quality, show originality and have a strong identity and personal voice. CAA acts as a vocal advocate for the crafts in Britain generally. We offer to the public examples of the richness of craft in Britain today, highlighting the huge, often unnoticed role which the applied arts have played over centuries – and continue to play – in both our domestic lives and in the wider, built environment. Registered Charity No. 235914

Malcolm Martin and Gaynor Dowling's collaborative practice as wood artists emerged from an attempt to create a sculptura...
22/05/2026

Malcolm Martin and Gaynor Dowling's collaborative practice as wood artists emerged from an attempt to create a sculptural equivalent of Giorgio Morandi’s still life paintings, whose spatially complex compositions have always intrigued the pair.

Through meticulous, repeated carving with traditional hand-tool techniques, their sculptures bear the traces of the making process in their textured surfaces. See more of Martin and Dowling's sculptures in the gallery and online.

Scott Benefield has distilled the essence of summer into handblown glass in his new collection of juicy citrus yellows, ...
19/05/2026

Scott Benefield has distilled the essence of summer into handblown glass in his new collection of juicy citrus yellows, blood orange swirls and cool lavenders that catch the light just right. Glasses, vases, jugs, and more made for long afternoons and sunset cocktails. 🧡

Available in the gallery and online!

15/05/2026

Only two more days to see ‘Colours in Conversation’, our London Craft Week show that’s bringing a bolt of sunshine to the gallery! Ceramics, jewellery, glass, textiles, and much more to explore.

On view until Saturday 16th May.

Colours in Conversation | London Craft Week | 11 - 16 May 2026⁠Summer has come early to the gallery, thanks to a bolt of...
14/05/2026

Colours in Conversation | London Craft Week | 11 - 16 May 2026⁠

Summer has come early to the gallery, thanks to a bolt of colour from our eight makers taking part in our London Craft Week exhibition, Colours in Conversation!

Sarah Emily Porter's bold, colour-led pieces balance order and chance, with acrylic paint flowing freely across the rigid geometry of stitched cloth.

In Emma Baker's handblown glass, colour is held in suspension. Her Distortion series is a new exploration into the characteristics of glass, emerging from experimentation with positive and negative space.

See all these pieces and more in the gallery until 16 May, with a late opening until 7pm on Thursday 14 May.

Colours in Conversation | London Craft Week | 11 - 16 May 2026⁠⁠Join us this week for our latest show, Colours in Conver...
13/05/2026

Colours in Conversation | London Craft Week | 11 - 16 May 2026⁠

Join us this week for our latest show, Colours in Conversation, which features the work of eight makers exploring colour as a language of emotion.⁠

Jaeeun Kim's work is characterised by themes such as shelter, distance, memory, and quiet observation, expressed through a painterly application of glazes and a whimsical cast of recurring characters, such as cats and birds.

Ömer Öner takes a collage approach to his chosen medium, transforming found objects into ceramic assemblages that are unified by bold colour and the soft, smooth surface of porcelain.⁠

See these pieces and more in Colours in Conversation, until Saturday 16 May.⁠

Colours in Conversation | London Craft Week | 11 - 16 May 2026Join us this week for our London Craft Week show, Colours ...
12/05/2026

Colours in Conversation | London Craft Week | 11 - 16 May 2026

Join us this week for our London Craft Week show, Colours in Conversation, which transforms the gallery into a rainbow of colour.

In joyous shades of turquoise and green, Carol Sinclair's latest series of porcelain vessels and plates references the artistic and social movement Solarpunk, which envisions a sustainable, optimistic future where humanity lives in harmony with nature.

Sarah Packington transforms the graphic patterns and bright hues of mid-century textiles by designers such as Lucienne Day into wearable acrylic jewellery that brings a pop of colour to every outfit.

09/05/2026

Colours in Conversation: London Craft Week 2026 | 11 - 16 May

We look forward to welcoming you to the gallery next week for 'Colours in Conversation', our London Craft Week exhibition (Monday 11th - Saturday 16th May). Featuring eight makers working across ceramics, glass, jewellery and textiles, the show explores colour as a language of emotion.

Featuring new works by Jennifer Shellard, Sarah Packington, Emma Baker, Jill Bryars, Carol Sinclair, Ömer Öner, Sarah Emily Porter, and Jaeeun Kim.

'Colours in Conversation' is presented as part of London Craft Week 2026, a city-wide festival celebrating exceptional craftsmanship.

Earth & Fire: Five Voices in Clay, until 30 April 2026Walter Keeler has gained an international reputation for his salt-...
28/04/2026

Earth & Fire: Five Voices in Clay, until 30 April 2026

Walter Keeler has gained an international reputation for his salt-glazed ceramics, which reflect both his deep knowledge of British ceramics history and his appreciation for the sensorial delights of clay as a medium.

Walter Keeler is a British studio potter and was professor of Ceramics at the University of the West of England from 1994 to 2002. Keeler was born in London and attended Harrow School of Art, London, from 1958 until 1963, where he was trained by Michael Casson. He established his first pottery at Bledlow Bridge, Buckinghamshire, in 1965, and in 1976 he moved his studio to Penallt, Wales, where he lives with his wife Madoline. Writer Oliver Watson described him as 'one of the most important and influential potters of the 1980s'.

Keeler's work is held in a number of public collections including Victoria & Albert Museum, National Museum Wales, American Craft Museum, New York, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, USA and the Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo.

See Walter Keeler's work in 'Earth & Fire: Five Voices in Clay', on view in the gallery and online until 30th April.

24/04/2026

London finally got the memo! ☀️✨

Now that the sun is out, we are delighting in the warm glow of gold and the sparkle of gemstones. Come and try on some wearable sunshine in the gallery today!

Featuring pieces by:





Earth & Fire: Five Voices in Clay, until 30 April 2026Chris began working with clay in his mid-thirties when he began a ...
24/04/2026

Earth & Fire: Five Voices in Clay, until 30 April 2026

Chris began working with clay in his mid-thirties when he began a two year apprenticeship with Edmund de Waal. His collection includes beakers, bowls, cups, teapots, jugs and pots for flowers.

Mirror black tenmokus breaking to rust, and luminous celadons, are used independently or in the seductive combination he has long made his own.
His technique gets ever more refined. He likes rows, exulting in the rhythm of repeated but subtly different shapes, which emphasize the organic nature of the handmade. Chris' work has been exhibited in the UK & internationally since 1998.

See Chris Keenan's work in 'Earth & Fire: Five Voices in Clay', on view in the gallery and online until 30th April.

Address

6 Paddington Street
London
W1U5QG

Opening Hours

Wednesday 11am - 5pm
Thursday 11am - 5pm
Friday 11am - 5pm
Saturday 11am - 5pm

Telephone

+442076200086

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