History & Mission

The American Museum of Ceramic Art was founded in 2003, in Pomona, California. The mission of the museum is to champion the art, history, creation, and technology of ceramics through exhibitions, collections, outreach, and studio programming.

AMOCA’s Founder, David Armstrong, is a Claremont resident and Pomona entrepreneur. He fell in love with ceramics in the 1960s while he was a student at Pomona College and studied with the legendary Scripps College ceramics professor Paul Soldner. This experience inspired Armstrong to collect the work of other ceramic artists.

Armstrong thought the country would benefit from a museum focused exclusively on clay and that it should be located in Southern California which has a rich ceramic and arts tradition. A core group of community members agreed, and they joined with Armstrong in 2003, to incorporate the American Museum of Ceramic Art as a California nonprofit organization

For its first nine years, AMOCA was located in a 3,000 square foot storefront in downtown Pomona, an economically struggling district where art is an important element of the continuing community revitalization program. Despite the extremely small space, AMOCA’s talented and dedicated staff organized dozens of thought-provoking exhibitions that drew a local and regional audience.

Nonetheless, space constraints and the need to store AMOCA’s growing ceramics collection led the museum to purchase a former bank building in 2011. The 51,000 square foot building includes ample space for exhibition galleries, collection storage, a library, staff offices, meeting spaces, museum store, parking, and a fully equipped, 12,000 square foot ceramics studio. We are in the process of renovating the building to meet standards of the American Alliance of Museums.

Click below to view a short video about David and Julie Armstrong. The video was produced for the dedication of the their eponymous gallery on October 14, 2018.

399 N Garey Ave Pomona, CA 91767
909.865.3146 | info@amoca.org
The museum is open Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, 11 AM–4 PM. Plan your visit by clicking here.

For information about Ceramics Studio hours and availability, please click here for the Ceramics Studio.