Arts & Culture

A Louisiana Sculptor Immortalizes Southern Flowers

For New Orleans-based sculptor Bradley Sabin, there’s no such thing as too many magnolias; he has a Japanese magnolia in his yard at home, and he’s made tens of thousands of ceramic magnolia blossoms glazed in deep reds, pinks, whites, and metallic blacks. “I have several flower forms I use, but people always gravitate to magnolias,” he says, “and this is a way to bring that nature inside.” These flowers take a prominent place in his exhibition titled Botanica, which runs through January at the Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of Art in Biloxi, Mississippi, a museum focused on displaying ceramic arts within its unique architectural space. Nearly two-thousand handmade and dark-glazed magnolia blooms sweep across the curved walls around Sabin’s other sculptures, cage-like, human-form-inspired pieces filled with leaves or flowers. “I’m always looking at the architecture of a space and thinking about what would a plant do if it was growing there,” Sabin says. See images of the Botanica exhibition and other magnolias and wild hibiscus flowers that Sabin has arranged in galleries and private homes across the country.

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The Botanica exhibition in Biloxi, Mississippi, at the Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of Art.

Photo: Courtesy of the Ohr-O'Keefe Museum of Art

Magnolia blossoms with a dark metallic glaze spread across the walls at the Botanica exhibition.

Photo: Courtesy of the Ohr-O'Keefe Museum of Art

Purple magnolias at the Voltz Clarke Gallery in New York, where a new exhibition opening in January will feature Sabin’s work.

Photo: Courtesy of the Voltz Clarke Gallery

A previous Sabin installation at the Voltz Clark Gallery.

Photo: Courtesy of the Ohr-O'Keefe Museum of Art

Pink and purple magnolias at the Voltz Clarke Gallery.

Photo: Courtesy of the Voltz Clarke Gallery

One of Sabin’s flower installations at a private home in Texas.

Photo: Courtesy of the Voltz Clarke Gallery

Wild hibiscus flowers in green, white, and purple at the Voltz Clarke Gallery.

Photo: Courtesy of the Voltz Clarke Gallery

Flowers in the dining area of a private home in New York.

Photo: Courtesy of the Voltz Clarke Gallery