Aggie Zed

Misdirection, mixed media on paper, 13 x 20”, $400Contact us to purchase

Misdirection, mixed media on paper, 13 x 20”, $400

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Clasp, mixed media on paper, 15 x 22”, $400Contact us to purchase

Clasp, mixed media on paper, 15 x 22”, $400

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Lever, mixed media on paper, 15 x 22”, $400Contact us to purchase

Lever, mixed media on paper, 15 x 22”, $400

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Good Red, mixed media on paper, 15 x 22.5”, $400Contact us to purchase

Good Red, mixed media on paper, 15 x 22.5”, $400

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Untitled (Mechanical Rabbit Study), mixed media on paper, 14 x 18”, $400Contact us to purchase

Untitled (Mechanical Rabbit Study), mixed media on paper, 14 x 18”, $400

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Fish, ceramic, $45

Fish, ceramic, $45 (currently out of stock)

Elephant I, ceramic, $45

Elephant ceramic, $45 (currently out of stock)

Cat I, ceramic, $45

Cat, ceramic, $45 (currently out of stock)

Figure I, ceramic, $165

Figure I, ceramic, $165

Figure II, ceramic, $165

Figure II, ceramic, $165

Figure III, ceramic, $165

Figure III, ceramic, $165

Figure IV, ceramic, $165

Figure IV, ceramic, $165

Figure V, ceramic, $165

Figure V, ceramic, $165

Figure VI, ceramic, $165

Figure VI, ceramic, $165

Figure VII, ceramic, $165

Figure VII, ceramic, $165

FigureVIII, ceramic, $165

FigureVIII, ceramic, $165

Figure IX, ceramic, $165

Figure IX, ceramic, SOLD

Figure X, ceramic, $165

Figure X, ceramic, $165

Figure XI, ceramic, $165

Figure XI, ceramic, $165

A native of Charleston, South Carolina, Aggie Zed grew up in a large family on Sullivan's Island riding ponies and donkeys on the beach.  As a child she watched her father repair television sets, and played for hours with cheap plastic horses and cowboys which had no moving parts.  She could always draw.

Living in Richmond, Virginia, after graduating from The University of South Carolina with a degree in Fine Arts, she supported her painting by designing and building ceramic chess sets.  Her work in clay evolved to become a widely-collected series of human-animal hybrid figures with which she has made a living.

Aggie Zed's sculpture ranges from intimately-scaled ceramic figures of people and human-animal hybrids to copper wire and ceramic horses to ceramic and mixed-metals contrivances she calls "scrap floats".  Her scrap floats are intended as entries in a parade of the future.

Her drawings and painting are informed by a lifelong celebration of the beauty and strangeness of dreams posed against the absurdity and poignancy of supposedly rational human activity.  Her mediums are dry pastel and various inks with water on paper.   Aggie currently lives with her husband in Gordonsville, Virginia where she keeps animals in her life, especially chickens, which defy anthropomorphism.