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Susanne Kibak Redfield

From mainstream to main street, this Sisters artist rose to commercial success before returning her brand and designs to a small-town scale.

written by Lee Lewis Husk

Bend_Magazine_Susanne_Redfield_Artist_Profile_Sisters_Studio_Redfield_by_Talia_Galvin(14of19)
Photo by Talia Galvin

Decorative, hand-painted tiles have formed the backsplash of Susanne Redfieldโ€™s life for the past thirty-five years. Among her professional successes was the time she made tiles for White House holiday decorations. She ran a commercial and custom tile factory from Redmond. She hobnobbed with the countryโ€™s best interior designers and sold a line of hand-painted ceramic tiles through Ann Sacks Tile & Stone, a Portland-born company. When Ann Sacks sold her business to Kohler (of plumbing fame), Redfieldโ€™s tiles got fired into prime time, appearing in twenty-three showrooms from New York to Los Angeles and London.

All this success happened from Sisters, where Redfield has lived since the early 1980s. โ€œItโ€™s been fun to do what Iโ€™ve done from this little town,โ€ she said. โ€œI didnโ€™t have to live in New York to access the markets.โ€

Redfield earned a degree in ceramic arts from the University of California Santa Cruz and began as many fledgling artists doโ€”selling the product of her craft at Saturday markets. Her work caught the eye of a local contractor and interior designer who commissioned murals for kitchens and baths in Black Butte Ranch.

โ€œI love the utility of tile,โ€ she said. โ€œIt is a building material everyone needs, but it is a constant challenge to make an everyday item transcend the mundane and really become an inspirational surface that lifts the spirit.โ€

As commissions poured in, Redfield opened Kibak Tile to manufacture hand-painted tiles. In 1996, the factory moved into an industrial space in Redmond where Kibak made high-end tiles for everything from pools to restaurants.

By 2013, Redfield was ready to downsize. She sold the factory to a California company and repurposed her energies toward opening Studio Redfield on Hood Street in Sisters in 2014. The space is part gallery, part studio, part retail store. Itโ€™s a place where local artists and crafts-people can showcase and sell their workโ€”from husband Randy Redfieldโ€™s contemporary paintings and Kathy Deggendorferโ€™s folk art to hand-carved wood pieces, tribal art, jewelry and even her momโ€™s hand-knit baby sweaters.

Redfield is looking forward to collaborating with companies such as California-based Fireclay Tile, which recently launched a hand-painted collection of Redfieldโ€™s designs. Instead of selling out of a showroom, the company sells factory direct to consumers, she said, allowing her to focus exclusively on design. For production with non-Fireclay products, Redfield is doing research and development on new patterns and glazes with an Arizona factory that has cutting-edge tile-making capabilities. From her small studio on Hood Street, she hopes to launch other national accounts.

โ€œI never thought of myself as an artist in the classic sense,โ€ she said. โ€œI think of myself more as a designer in the same vein as furniture or fabric print designers. The challenge is to design something unique but livable, something lasting and not trendy.โ€ย 

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