Nickola Pottinger’s show I’m a Container for My Own Spirit‘at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum is a very personal and emotional collection of work. Through the use of sculpture, Pottinger explores the themes of identity, memory, grief, and self-preservation, in order to create a space where the body is both shelter and storyteller.
The very title of the exhibition is one of self-containment and resilience. It is the idea that the human body contains not only physical form but also emotional history and inner strength. Pottinger’s exhibition is one that embodies this idea, where figures are both fragile and grounded, broken and resilient.
The sculptures are always incomplete or injured but never helpless. They exude a sense of quiet defiance, a reminder that life can coexist with vulnerability. The sculptures’ surfaces bear the marks of touch, pressure, and transformation, so that the process of the artist is revealed.
The exhibition is not one that seeks to offer easy answers. Rather, it is one that seeks to ask the viewer to occupy a space of discomfort, reflection, and recognition. Pottinger creates a space for silence and allows the viewer to occupy a space of emotional response rather than intellectual understanding.
Pottinger Examines the Body as Memory
In this exhibition, Pottinger explores the body as a living archive. Her sculptures convey that experiences, particularly painful ones, are embodied, not merely intellectualized. The body remembers what the mind may attempt to forget.
The figures that Pottinger sculpts are very human. They are not idealized or perfected. Flaws, voids, and irregularities are intentionally included, emphasizing that imperfection is the result of living and surviving.
The exhibition also touches on the idea of self-protection. The body is a container that contains the soul while being exposed to external forces. This is a very relevant concept in a world that is shaped by social, emotional, and cultural factors.
Each sculpture that Pottinger has created is like a moment in time that has been captured. They appear to be caught between disintegrating and being strong, which are moments that people can identify with in their own lives.
The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum provides a fitting setting for this exhibition. The open, contemplative space allows viewers to move slowly and absorb the presence of each piece without distraction.
Ultimately, I’m a Container for My Own Spirit,” is more than an exhibition—it is a conversation of the emotions. The sculptures of Pottinger encourage us to remember that to hold oneself together is an act of strength, and to bear one’s spirit is both a burden and a triumph.




