Erica Prince is a multidisciplinary artist and designer whose work presents opportunities for exploration of potentialities within lifestyle design. Her works have been featured in T: New York Times Style Magazine, Architectural Digest, Design Sponge, Vice, Artsy, Wallpaper and Canadian Art.
Prince earned her BFA from Maryland Institute College of Art and her MFA from Tyler School of Art and Architecture. She has been awarded residencies at Banff Centre, The Vermont Studio Center, The Garrison Institute and The Fabric Workshop and Museum. Prince teaches printmaking and drawing at A.W. Dreyfoos School of the Arts in West Palm Beach, FL.
SELECTED PRESS
Ceramic Container featured in Architectural Digest
“‘It sounds clichéd, but we wanted to build our dream house,’ says this mother of three, an author, about her place in Southampton. They called on local architect James Merrell Architects and New York–based #AD100designer Kelly Behun to inject the Zen interiors with color and conversation pieces. Memphis Group ceramics sit alongside contemporary vessels by Brooklyn-based Erica Prince and Manal Kara.” – Hannah Martin
I Got a Radical Makeover — for Art’s Sake
“I tell myself I won’t gasp and cover my mouth when I look in the mirror, but I do it anyway. The extra moment it takes me to recognize my own reflection is profoundly disorienting. I’m looking at a stranger.” – Ariela Gittlen
Erica Prince’s Vases Are for Way More Than Just Flowers
“We’d like to say fresh flowers in the house every week is our reality, but at least 50 percent of the time it’s purely a dream. Life gets busy and our vases sit empty. Recently, though, we realized there’s a middle ground between bouquet and bare. The eureka moment happened when we came across New York artist Erica Prince’s handcrafted Containers collection, a series of functional ceramic sculptures that bring to mind undulating pieces of coral.” – Lindsay Mather
A Bright, Evolving Apartment for Life & Growing Creative Works
“When Erica Prince and her husband Shane Jezowski were looking to move to Brooklyn from Philadelphia three years ago, they faced a bit of sticker shock. At the time, their beloved Philly place boasted lots of space and a rooftop garden, and their search for a new apartment in Brooklyn yielded rentals Erica had trouble envisioning as a place for creation — as a multidisciplinary artist, Erica’s home must also serve as a studio to create her ceramics, drawings, installations and relational projects.” – Text by Kelli Kehler, photos by Stephanie Price
Erica Prince Ceramics in The Wing DC Collection
The Wing, the social club for women on their way, recently expanded from Soho and Dumbo to their newest Washington DC location. Lolita Cros, the curator of The Wing’s all-female art collection, selected 9 of Erica Prince’s ceramic Containers to join the DC Collection.
Artists Show Us How to Make Outrageous Costumes for $100
“We commissioned three New York artists—Erica Prince, Mukunda Angulo, and Ziggy Mack-Johnson—to design us the Halloween costumes of their dreams. We gave them a budget of $100 to create their looks, and we asked them to document the whole process with disposable cameras. This is what they came up with.”
An Artist Is Giving Fairgoers Radical Makeovers At PULSE
“In our society, the ‘makeover’ mandate is generally uncontested—the goal is to look better, and to class up. But imagine you waltz into a beauty parlor and, veering from convention, you offer a fearless, laissez-faire ‘you know what, do whatever you want.’ And now, imagine that your first stop with your new look is an art fair.” – Molly Gottschalk
Women Who Create: Thinking Outside The Box with Multi-Disciplinary Artist Erica Prince
“Finding a fitting work description for Brooklyn-based artist Erica Prince is a tough job. The containers she creates are bold, playful and of such unexpected shapes that their use is not predefined but open to everyone’s own imagination.”
Crash drawing accompanying the keynote in Canadian Art Futures issue
“The condition of being alive now is infinite accessible worlds at once. Realities, and priorities, reconfigure by day, by hour, by tab. Now one of arts most vital functions is to crystallize a single world for a fixed and reproducible duration.” – Alexandra Molotkow
Office Magazine Interview
“For Prince, life and art are in no way separate spheres of existence. Rather, these two have fused together so effortlessly to form a single, gleaming entity.” -Kennedy Fairfax
A Colorful Brooklyn Home Fit for Art (& Retro Baking Projects!)
For our “My Life at Home” series, we took a peek inside artist Erica Prince’s eclectic living/studio space. –Hana Asbrink
Erica Prince and Boofy on Girls and Their Cats
“I work from home in my studio in Bushwick, and I am so lucky to have Boofy as my assistant, checking in on me throughout the day, sitting in my lap as I work at my desk, sitting on top of all my in-progress drawings and lying in the middle of the floor in all the sunny spots.”
The Art of the Makeover | Perspectives, Erica Prince
“In our Perspectives video, a series on artists featured at the art fairs in Miami, we get a firsthand experience inside Brooklyn-based multidisciplinary artist Erica Prince’s studio. The project explores the aesthetic choices in creating a personal identity.”- The Creators Project
Reviews of Natalie Prass’ Short Court Style Music Video directed by Natalie Prass and Erica Prince
Natalie Prass’ Why Don’t You Believe in Me Video directed by Erica Prince and Tiona McClodden
“Everyone's been there before — that dark part of the brain where fear and doubt and a thousand unanswered questions reside, doing their dirty work to sabotage every attempt at happiness. In her latest video, for the song "Why Don't You Believe In Me?," singer Natalie Prass finds herself trapped deep inside her own head, battling a broken heart and the uncertainty it's left in its wake.” – Robin Hilton
Dollhouse featured in Wallpaper* City Guide Philadelphia
The newest edition of Phaidon’s Wallpaper* City Guide for Philadelphia features Dollhouse, the multimedia exhibition by Erica Prince at one of the cities oldest and most beloved galleries, Vox Populi.