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here - Ceramic Arts Daily
M o n t h l y Lorna Meaden More is More focus college clay September 2009 $7.50 (Can$9) www.ceramicsmonthly.org Ceramics Monthly September 2009 1 M o n t h l y Publisher Charles Spahr Editorial editorial@ceramicsmonthly.org telephone: (614) 895-4213 fax: (614) 891-8960 editor Sherman Hall assistant editor Holly Goring assistant editor Jessica Knapp editorial assistant Erin Pfeifer technical editor Dave Finkelnburg online editor Jennifer Poellot Harnetty Advertising/Classifieds advertising@ceramicsmonthly.org telephone: (614) 794-5834 fax: (614) 891-8960 classifieds@ceramicsmonthly.org telephone: (614) 794-5843 advertising manager Mona Thiel advertising services Jan Moloney Marketing telephone: (614) 794-5809 marketing manager Steve Hecker Subscriptions/Circulation customer service: (800) 342-3594 ceramicsmonthly@pubservice.org Design/Production production editor Cynthia Griffith design Paula John Editorial and advertising offices 600 Cleveland Ave., Suite 210 Westerville, Ohio 43082 Editorial Advisory Board Linda Arbuckle; Professor, Ceramics, Univ. of Florida Scott Bennett; Sculptor, Birmingham, Alabama Val Cushing; Studio Potter, New York Dick Lehman; Studio Potter, Indiana Meira Mathison; Director, Metchosin Art School, Canada Bernard Pucker; Director, Pucker Gallery, Boston Phil Rogers; Potter and Author, Wales Jan Schachter; Potter, California Mark Shapiro; Worthington, Massachusetts Susan York; Santa Fe, New Mexico Ceramics Monthly (ISSN 0009-0328) is published monthly, except July and August, by Ceramic Publications Company; a subsidiary of The American Ceramic Society, 600 Cleveland Ave., Suite 210, Westerville, Ohio 43082; www.ceramics.org. 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All rights reserved. www.ceramicsmonthly.org Ceramics Monthly September 2009 2 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 3 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 4 September 2009 / Volume 57 Number 7 M o n t h l y focus college clay 29 2009 Undergraduate Showcase Clearly, the shaping of the next generation of ceramic artists is in confident hands—those of the instructors as well as the students. After all, isn’t a student the party most responsible for his or her own education? 40 2009 NCECA Regional Student Juried Exhibition Reflections on the past and future of one of the most prestigious student ceramic exhibitions, including statements from this year’s jurors, and NCECA’s plans to open the RSJE to national competition in 2010 and beyond. 50 MFA Factor: Tyler School of Art, Temple University Kicking off this year’s series of graduate program profiles is an urban school located in the City of Brotherly Love. Clay love is more like it! features 46 More is More: Lorna Meaden by Stephanie Lanter We talk about the celebration of function a lot, but few potters turn that around into the function of celebration. With highly ornate forms and bright soda-fired surfaces, Meaden explores the social dynamics of groups—particularly parties! monthly methods A Very Fine Line by Lorna Meaden 53 Otto Heino, 1915–2009 by Don Pilcher In response to the passing of one of the greats in a generation, a former student reflects on the importance and impact of a teacher and pioneer of studio ceramics. 54 Down to Earth: Joseph Pintz’s Hand-Hewn Pots by Casey Ruble Grounded in a family history of handwork and connection to the earth, the pots and objects Pintz makes speak of the direct, honest pursuit of everyday living. monthly methods Hand-Hewn Pottery by Joseph Pintz cover: Lidded sugar bowl, 9 in. (23 cm) in height, thrown and altered porcelain, soda fired to cone 10, 2008, by Lorna Meaden, Durango, Colorado; page 46. 29 40 54 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 5 Photo: Matthew S. Mickel departments 8 from the editor 10 letters from readers 12 answers from the CM technical staff 14 suggestions from readers 14 Tip of the Month: way cool wads! 16 upfront reviews, news and exhibitions 58 call for entries 58 58 60 60 International Exhibitions United States Exhibitions Regional Exhibitions Fairs and Festivals 62 new books Vessel | Sculpture 18 German and International Ceramics Since 1946 edited by Olaf Thormann 64 calendar 64 64 67 68 70 72 Conferences Solo Exhibitions Group Ceramics Exhibitions Ceramics in Multimedia Exhibitions Fairs, Festivals and Sales Workshops 78 classified advertising 79 index to advertisers 80 comment The Perfect Match by Lily Zopfi online www.ceramicartsdaily.org information and inspiration from inside the artist’s studio 16 Features Tips, techniques, profiles and more—delivered to your inbox. Education Listings of colleges, classes, guilds, workshops and residencies. Galleries Artist gallery pages, plus our comprehensive listing of museums and galleries that showcase ceramic art. Bookstore Complete line of ceramic art books to inspire, inform and instruct. Free Gifts Handy downloadable resources for the studio, including projects, recipes, our annual Buyer’s Guide and more! 17 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 6 Magazines Current and archived features, exhibition reviews, article index. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 7 from the editor I just read the little slip of paper that came in the fortune cookie with my Chinese take out food; it said, “You don’t have to know where you are going to be headed in the right direction.” My first thought was, “that isn’t a fortune.” I mean, it’s insightful and thoughtful, but it says nothing of what I can expect in the next five minutes or the next five years; it doesn’t help me plan my day or week. Apparently, the manufacturers of these treats are losing their nerve, so I think I’m going to start calling them affirmation cookies. Usually, I only pay attention to these “fortunes” when they reinforce what I already believe, or when they’re particularly off-the-wall, like the one that said, “Lucky you, put on your party clothes, you know, the clean ones.” That one stayed taped to my mirror for months (and I may have worn clean clothes a little more often during that time). But this particular piece of wisdom today got me thinking about the difference between plans and reality; what you try to make happen and what actually transpires. In my experience, with small concerns in life, these can be one and the same (I plan to go buy clay—I go buy clay), but with larger concerns, like career aspirations, it’s difficult to plan beyond a certain point. There are simply too many variables. In ceramics, it’s sometimes difficult to plan all the way through a particular piece, let alone an entire career. I imagine this is true outside of ceramics as well, but I’ll stick to what I know. Many of the people I went to school with are no longer involved in ceramics. It’s quite likely that they decided it wasn’t what they wanted after all, and I hope they chose something else that was more fulfilling for them. At the same time, there are many who never studied ceramics but have discovered that clay is what they need to be doing (so much for that finance degree). This issue is focused on those pursuing degrees in ceramics (check them out, beginning on page 29), and my thoughts here are especially directed toward them. How many times have you been asked what your plan is after graduating from college—or high school, for that matter? What are you going to do with it? Where are you going to put it? How are you going Ceramics Monthly September 2009 8 by Sherman Hall to make a living? If we are to be artistically productive, we can’t worry too much about these things (at least not while we are in the studio). Don’t forget about them entirely, but don’t dwell on them exclusively or let them determine your artistic choices—just keep making your own work. At the same time, we all have a plan of some sort. Even the lack of a plan is a plan, it’s just a really bad one. We need to have a direction, even if we know that’s going to change. Your plan will require more effort and time than you had hoped. It will take more sweat, and perhaps tears, than you might like. It will cost more money than you are prepared to invest (especially if you have school loans), but if you believe in the direction you are heading, then there are several destinations that will be available and acceptable to you. And you don’t need a fortune cookie to tell you that. e-mail letters to shall@ceramicsmonthly.org Ceramics Monthly September 2009 9 letters e-mail letters to shall@ceramicsmonthly.org American Clay in Good Hands mentioned what “full time in the studio” was. My wife and I work many long hours as we have a studio, gallery, shop, do our work, teach classes, and have a drawing class. We rent two studios out so we can afford ours. We have a home that needs work (ca. 1895) and six grandkids. How do we squeeze it all in? It would be nice to have a maid, gardener, cook, mechanic, doctor, chauffer, and personal secretary. To what extent do your authors have outside responsibilities and help? I am lucky if I get 12 hours per week to call my own, with only the whir of the arrived. American clay is vibrant due to wheel to keep me company. Good magaartists at the level of Eshelman. I am cerzine. Thanks! tain that CM readers will agree. Tim Sawyer, St. Charles, Missouri Tom Turnquist, Denver, Colorado The article on Paul Eshelman is great [“Work and Play: The Potter’s Life,” June/ July/August 2009]. The forms and designs are superb. His work is a mix of ikebana and mid-century modern. I went through the article four times the day that my CM Time and Energy Correction I really enjoyed the articles about working potters [“Work and Play: The Potter’s Life,” June/July/August 2009]. With the exception of Mark Hewitt, no one really On page 16 of the May issue, we presented a piece by Dirk Romijn, entitled Tear for the Ordinary Muslim, as part of our coverage for the show “Tulip Vases from Twelve Ceramics Monthly September 2009 10 Dirk Romijn’s Tear for the Ordinary Muslim, 15 in. (37 cm) in height, stoneware, 2008. Photo: Ron Zijlstra. Designers.” While Romijn’s work was on display at Gallery Terra (www.terra-delft. nl), it was not part of this exhibition. Below is another interesting piece by Romijn, which takes advantage of the fact that tulips cut before they bloom will continue to grow in the vase. Fire pottery AND glass in Paragon’s multi-purpose cone 10 kilns Janus-24 24” wide x 22 ½” deep 15” high interior Janus-1613 16 ½” wide 13 ¼” deep 8-sided interior Janus-23 22 ½” wide 22 ¼” deep 10-sided interior P aragon Janus-series kilns can fire both pottery and glass. Heating elements are mounted in the top and sidewalls. Imagine the exciting pieces you could make in a Janus kiln. Selection switch Select between glass and pottery with the flip of a switch. With the switch in the glass position, heat comes from the top elements and the middle sidewall element. With the switch in the pottery position, heat comes from only the sidewall elements. In the glass mode, fuse and sag large glass projects placed on a single shelf. In the pottery mode, fire to cone 10. You can also fire several shelves of smaller glass pieces using the pottery mode. Pinless top elements The elements in the lid/roof are mounted in a firebrick “ball” groove that eliminates element pins. The element coils are wider than the groove opening, so the elements stay in place without pins. The groove dissipates heat efficiently. Janus-27 28” wide 22 ¼” deep 12-sided interior The Janus-24 has elements in the top, sides, back, and door. The top elements use our pinless firebrick groove. Unique spring-assisted lid • Glass/pottery selection switch The lids on the Janus-23 and Janus-27 • 3” insulating refractory firebrick walls top-loading kilns are easy to lift with the • Janus-24: Operate the door latch with exclusive, patented Paragon spring counter-balance. A truss permits the lid to float, allowing for expansion of the lid. This promotes the long life of the bricks. (Ask competitors if their lids have these features.) Lift the lid with only 13 pounds of pressure. 2” blank top bricks For easier maintenance, we use 2” high blank wall bricks in the top row of the Janus-23 and Janus-27. Since the brick is without element grooves, it is less susceptible to damage during loading. Easy-access control box The patented control box on the Janus-23 and Janus-27 opens forward for easy maintenance. A folding support arm holds the box in the open position. one hand. • Sidewall elements in dropped, recessed brick grooves are easy to replace. • Tapered peepholes for a wide view • A steel floor pan supports the entire brick bottom of each kiln. • One year limited warranty • Available in 240, 200, 208, or 380 volt, 50 or 60 hertz, single or 3 phase. • Since Janus kilns are designed for por- celain, they also easily fire ceramics, china paint, decals, gold and, of course, glass. • The Sentry controller is mounted at the top of the switch box for comfortable operation. Ask about the AOP vent, which controls the KilnVent. Choose to automatically turn off the vent at firing maturity or at the end of cooling. For more details, see your nearest Paragon dealer, or call for a free catalog. Other Features • Digital Sentry 2.0: Cone-Fire with programmed slow cooling and 20-Segment Ramp-Hold. Manufactured by the Orton Ceramic Foundation exclusively for Paragon. Why buy two when one will do? Ceramics Monthly September 2009 11 2011 South Town East Blvd. Mesquite, Texas 75149-1122 800-876-4328 / 972-288-7557 Toll Free Fax 888-222-6450 www.paragonweb.com info@paragonweb.com answers From the CM Technical Staff Q I make my own porcelain grog by crushing up bisque porcelain scrap in a hammer mill. I wedge this grog back into the same porcelain body, so I can put in as little or as much grog as a particular project calls for and my work ends up coming out of the high-fire the same, with the same look, same glaze fit, etc. There is one mystery that I haven’t been able to figure out. The more grog I add, the higher the shrinkage from bisque to cone 10. Why is this?—A. B. Since grog can be any relatively coarse material added to a body, and much of what is commonly used as grog is vitrified clay or dense minerals, the typical result is that grog lowers both wet to dry shrinkage and firing shrinkage. I suspect the answer to your mystery is in the “porcelain scrap” that you bisque to make your grog. Most finished porcelain pieces have been tooled in some way well into the drying process, and this tooling compresses the porcelain, pressing clay particles into space that has been emptied by the evaporating water. If the scrap that you bisque to make your grog from has not been subject to any tooling, then it is less dense than most of your work and has more empty pore space to close up during vitrification during the high-fire, so it shrinks more and thereby increases the overall e-mail technical questions to editorial@ceramicsmonthly.org shrinkage of the body. While compression of your work is important to prevent cracks at joints and in flatter areas, the lack of it in your grog probably isn’t making any difference in your results beyond making it more difficult to predict your firing shrinkage exactly. David Pier Ceramics Consultant Chapel Hill, North Carolina Q I was wondering if anyone has knowledge on the subject of slip-casting porcelain in a vacuum. Is there any added strength achieved when casting in a vacuum environment (much like the lost-wax casting process of pouring molten metals from a crucible into a vacuum sealed investment flask)? I was thinking if the multiple-part plaster mold was sealed on my vacuum table it would pull the slip (under pressure) to create tighter fitting clay particles, resulting in a stronger cast. Have any tests been done in this area?—J. W. It may be possible to vacuum slip cast. Industry is now moving to permeable resin dies and molds that are used in a process called pressure casting. Sanitary ware such as sinks, toilets, urinals, etc., are being pressure cast, as is a good segment of ceramic tabletop ware. How it would function in a studio with a vacuum table, I don’t know. Plaster is water permeable, so you would need to find a way for the water to flow outside of the vacuum table. I also do not think that a vacuum table could pull enough vacuum over on entire piece to be effective. While it might be interesting to try this as an experiment, I would rely on the well established methods of slip casting in plaster molds. Slip cast pieces are very dense as the water hull completely surrounds the flat clay particle and is pulled out from around these minute particles quite evenly by I do not know of anyone using a method a well-designed plaster mold. The clay particles do you describe. It could very well work for you, line up parallel to the walls of the mold, resulting but my tendency is to look at added strength in in a very dense and strong ceramic casting. Jonathan Kaplan a casting body as a function of ingredient selecCeramic Design Group tion and firing, rather than pressure during the Denver, Colorado casting process. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 12 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 13 suggestions e-mail suggestions to editorial@ceramicsmonthly.org tip of the month Way Cool Wads! Begin by filling a small bucket with 2800 grams of clay slop. Weigh out 200 grams of alumina hydrate and fill up a second small bucket with very fine sawdust (fine enough to fall through a 20 mesh screen). Add the sawdust and the alumina hydrate a handful at a time to the clay slop. Continue blending the mixture until it becomes a workable clay consistency, then proceed to wedge the mixture until it is fully blended. Break the wadding mixture up into manageable chunks or balls and roll out approximately 3/8-inch thick slabs onto a canvas sheet (thicker slabs can be made for use with larger and/or heavier pieces). Use ruler guides or a slab roller to ensure even thickness throughout each slab. Next, lay another canvas mat on top of the slab. Carefully flip the slab over and trim off any cracked edges. Place a translucent plastic sheet over the slab. With the use of a pizza cutter and a straight edge, impress vertical grooves into the clay. After the vertical lines have been made, impress horizontal lines to create a grid. Remove the plastic sheet and allow the slab to dry. Break the slab into smaller manageable sections and bisque fire. Break the fired sections into individual squares using the grooves as score lines (in much the same way as two pyrometric cones are separated). Ceramics Monthly September 2009 14 Congratulations to Jason Doblin of Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Your subscription has been extended by one year! Ceramics Monthly September 2009 15 upfront exhibitions and reviews exhibitions 16 The Welsh Table The Smithsonian Institution’s Ripley Center, Washington, DC 17 Resident Artist Exhibition Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts, Helena, Montana 17 Artists of Northern Clay Center Northern Clay Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota 17 Melissa Mytty: Pickles and Pop The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 18 Curiosities Santa Fe Clay, Santa Fe, New Mexico 18 Akaji Ken Gallery Carla Koch, Amsterdam, The Netherlands 18 Figuration Jam Factory Contemporary Craft and Design, Adelaide, Australia 20 The Watershed Gala Wood-Fire Exhibition Gustin Ceramics, South Dartmouth, Massachusetts 20 Ben Jackel: Compliance Solutions LA Louver, Venice California 20 Draw + Decal Mudfire Clayworks and Gallery, Decatur, Georgia 22 Harp Overt Myrna Loy Center for the Performing and Media Arts, Helena, Montana 22 Looking Forward/Looking Back: Japanese/American Ceramics The Artisan Gallery, Northampton, Massachusetts reviews 24 Androgyny: New Work by Sergei Isupov by Tony Merino Mesa Contemporary Arts Center, Mesa, Arizona 26 Object Factory: The Art of Industrial Ceramics by Casey Ruble Museum of Arts and Design, New York, New York The Welsh Table Works by ten artists who build on and reinterpret traditional Welsh styles of pottery and their decoration are on view through September 21 at the Smithsonian Institution’s Ripley Center (www.si.edu/ripley) in Washington, DC. The exhibition, which originated at the Ruthin Craft Center in Wales and was curated by Jill Piercy, includes works by Justine Allison, Lowri Davies, David Frith, Margaret Frith, Virginia Graham, Morgen Hall, Walter Keeler, Claudia Lis, Micki Schloessingk, and James and Tilla Waters. “Lowri Davies draws upon Welsh domestic life and culture to inspire the surface decoration on her slip cast, bone china and porcelain tableware, explains Jill Piercy. “Her work has always been inspired by the objects people collect . . . . The bird series was inspired by the taxidermy work produced by the Hutchings family of Aberystwyth from the 1860s up until 1942. It was popular to display stuffed birds and animals in glass cases with realistic backgrounds and skies. In Lowri’s series, delicate drawings of birds decorate both the exterior and interior of cups, jugs, and bowls which are tinted with the reminiscent eggshell colors of white, pale blue, and yellow. “The ceramic collection range references the Swansea and Nantgarw porcelain produced in the 19th century that is displayed in the National Museum of Wales. Whereas the original is precisely decorated in a formal manner, Lowri picks up details and flourishes which give a sense of the period. . . . Her pieces are decorated with enamel transfer, digital transfer, and gold and silver luster. On the interior and exterior of the forms are delicate drawings of the cups, vessels, and floral decoration taken from the collections. The colored line drawings are fluid and delicate, lifted straight from the sketchbook. While her designs draw upon the rich heritage of Wales, they have a fresh and contemporary feel.” Above: Lowri Davies’ cups and small dish, bone china, enamel transfer, digital transfer, and luster. Below: Detail of enamel transfer and digital transfer imagery. Photos: Dewi Tannat Lloyd. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 16 Resident Artist Exhibition Works by the full-time and summer residents at the Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts (www.archiebray.org) in Helena, Montana were recently on view at the Foundation’s Warehouse Gallery. “I am particularly excited by what has been an intensive investigation of color and surface texture as they relate to my pots within the realm of what I call domestic intimacy,” explains Birdie Boone. “In sensual terms, many of us experience recognition of domestic intimacy through our emotional connections to the act of nourishing ourselves physically. My pottery forms and surfaces are subtle emotional translations or expressions of both a combination of memories of past domestic experience and of the current domestic realities that ultimately shape my identity both physically and mentally. “Although utility is what I ultimately engage in celebrating through my ceramic work, I also present ‘assemblages’ of my pots in order to encourage the viewer to consider the possibility that pots are so much more than the current reality of how they are perceived. These assemblages also serve as an objective expression of my own intuitions about the dual nature of physical and emotional nourishment.” Roberta Massuch’s, yellow bowl, 12 in. (30 cm) in length, earthenware, 2008. Image courtesy of Northern Clay Center. Artists of Northern Clay Center The Northern Clay Center (www.northernclaycenter.org) in Minneapolis, Minnesota recently held an exhibition of works by its affiliated artists. “I handbuild with a combination of firm and soft slabs: pressing and folding each component together, easing the clay into place,” states Roberta Massuch. “This technique creates tension within the form, allowing soft pillowing areas to flow into more defined seams and contours. I cast my focus on line and volume, almost as if each piece I create is a contour drawing brought to life. I intentionally leave the unglazed clay as the primary surface because it allows the quality of leather-hard clay to be carried into the finished piece. I enjoy how it draws you in, inviting you to investigate each object through touch, through use. “Function is truly important in my work, in both my utilitarian and my sculptural endeavors. I am interested in eliciting a feeling of comfort and childhood for the viewer/user through the creation of soft, playful forms. I want to convey the precious nature of each clay object, and its need to be carefully handled, yet treasured and cherished through its use.” Birdie Boone’s Kitchen Sink for One, 11 in. (28 cm) in diameter, mid-range redware, slip, and glaze, oxidation fired. Melissa Mytty: Pickles and Pop A solo exhibition of sculptural cup and saucer forms by Melissa Mytty was recently on view at the Clay Studio (www.theclaystudio.org) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Mytty’s cups are the size of traditional teacups or demitasse cups. In contrast, the scale, volume, and interpretations of the saucers varies widely. “The cup as an object has been the focus of my investigation as a designer,” states Mytty. “My inspiration comes from historical ceramic teacups and saucers, the form as it functions, and its place in every day life. I am driven by contemporary music, from country to hip hop, and fashion design from high-end couture to thrift stores. “Currently I am focused on teacup designs that will function beautifully yet be a contemporary cultural signifier, a blending of street style with the grandma aesthetic of traditional teacups. My work draws from the rich history of ceramics while injections of contemporary culture are critical and keep my work pushing the boundaries of the material and the format of the cup.” Melissa Mytty’s Delicious, 7 in. (18 cm) in height, porcelain, Plexiglas, 2008. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 17 exhibitions Curiosities Kate MacDowell’s Buzz, 14½ in. (37 cm) in height, handbuilt porcelain, acrylic gel, 2008. An exhibition of works by Lindsay Feuer, Kate MacDowell, Andy Rogers, and Kathleen Royster Lamb was recently on view at Santa Fe Clay (www.santafeclay.com) in Santa Fe, New Mexico. “The work of these artists has the common thread of addressing the world around us. Nature, including human, botanical, and animal forms is the focus of these artists’ sculptures, and issues of growth, decay, and metamorphosis are addressed,” states Santa Fe Clay’s director, Avra Leodas. “From richly varied and hybridized fruits, flowers, animal, and human forms, each artist in this group comments on man’s relationship to our environment. Each of these artists works in an intimate scale, with attention to intricate detail and surface.” “In my work this romantic ideal of union with the natural world conflicts with our contemporary impact on the environment,” states Kate MacDowell. “These pieces are in part responses to environmental stressors including climate change, toxic pollution, and genetically modified crops. They also borrow from myth, art history, figures of speech, and other cultural touchstones. In some pieces, aspects of the human figure stand in for ourselves and act out sometimes harrowing, sometimes humorous transformations that illustrate our current relationship with the natural world. In others, animals take on anthropomorphic qualities when they are given safety equipment to attempt to protect them from man-made environmental threats. In each case, the union between man and nature is shown to be one of friction and discomfort, with the disturbing implication that we too are vulnerable to being victimized by our destructive practices. . . . I see each piece as a captured and preserved specimen, a painstaking record of endangered natural forms and a commentary on our own culpability. Akaji Ken Figuration A solo exhibition of new work by Akaji Ken was recently on view at Gallery Carla Koch (www.carlakoch.nl) in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. “Even though the work of Akaji Ken is clearly influenced by Japanese tradition, he has developed a completely unique and distinctive style,” states gallery director Carla Koch. “Akaji Ken has become Figurative ceramics by Stephen Bird, Michael Doolan, Jenny Orchard, and Mark Thompson were recently on view at Jam Factory Contemporary Craft and Design (www.jamfactory.com.au) in Adelaide, Australia. “My choice of woodland animals and scenarios uncovers the darker underbelly of the childhood narrative experience,” states Michael Doolan. “Groupings of imaginary talking animals, stripped of facial features and set amongst anthropomorphized woodland settings, are set to recall the Gothic undertow of children’s fairy tales. The arrested development of the creatures generates metamorphic possibility. My most recent experiments involve camouflaging the ceramic surface of my subjects and environments, including Woodcutter Rabbit and Grandma’s House, in a second nylon skin. My material deception, achieved by d i s g u i s i n g clay . . . implies another level of deception, offering Michael Doolan’s Red Story (Woodcutter Rabbit), 19 a cautionary note in. (48 cm) in height, ceramic, nylon, wood. Photo: Graham Baring. to my viewers.” Akaji Ken’s lidded box, 12 in. (31 cm) in length, porcelain, overglaze, 2008. Photo: Tom Haartsen. known through his red overglazed objects and his subtle and consistently applied decorations. Akaji’s shapes stem directly from Japanese tradition. He produces sake cups, stackable boxes, and sushi dishes, whose shapes hardly differ from every-day Japanese utensils. However, through his decoration techniques these objects transcend their daily functions, even though they can still be used.” The boxes in this exhibition are derived from traditional brush boxes and food boxes, a single object or several stacked forms. These have intriguing decorations on the outside with heavy brush strokes in red overglaze and very delicate decorations in silver and gold on the inside. A translation of the traditional shapes to contemporary objets d’art.” Ceramics Monthly September 2009 18 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 19 exhibitions Ben Jackel: Compliance Solutions The first solo exhibition of Los Angeles-based artist Ben Jackel was recently on view at LA Louver (www.lalouver.com) in Venice, California. “Ben Jackel’s sculptures blend the artist’s interest in history, particularly the history of war, and an attraction to the beauty of man-made objects, with his sophisticated handling of clay and wood, states Elizabeth East, a director at LA Louver. “The forms that Jackel creates range from simple devices, to highly technical and refined machines; from objects that are life-size, to those many times smaller or larger than their real-life equivalent. “The centerpiece of the exhibition is an installation of 256 Greek warriors created from clay, titled Syntagma, 2008–2009. The 6-inch-high figures—each a unique combination of stance, helmet, breastplate, and shield—hold a metal-tipped mahogany spear, and are presented in battle formation. “In the series Miles to Go Until We Sleep, 2008-2009, seven naval destroyers plow through a gallery wall and are perceived by the visitor in aerial view. Each vessel re-imagines an original warship from the Battle of Leyte Gulf, the largest naval battle of WWII. In lyrical counter- Above and left: Bruce Winn’s tulipiere, 10 in. (25 cm) in length, wood-fired porcelain, 2009. The Watershed Gala Wood-Fire Exhibition Wood-fired works by 120 invited artists from the US, Canada, and Australia were on display earlier this year at Gustin Ceramics (www.gustinceramics.com), South Dartmouth, Massachusetts. All of the works included in the exhibition were shipped or delivered unfinished and fired together in Chris Gustin’s three-chambered anagama kiln. An online auction of selected works, including the tulipiere by Bruce Winn, shown here, was organized in addition to the exhibition. All proceeds from the sale of the works were donated to the Watershed Center for the Ceramic Arts in Newcastle, Maine. Ben Jackel’s Sprinkler Heads, 14 in. (36 cm) in length, stoneware, ebony, 2008–2009. balance to the ships, with In the Hearts of Men, 2008-2009, Jackel interprets the shrouded, winged figure created by Daniel Chester French (1850-1931) in 1922, to commemorate the Massachusetts dead of WWI. “A fire extinguisher, a fire hose, and a box of sprinkler heads comprise a group of functional objects that are generally taken for granted, until crisis commands attention to their necessity. These Jackel renders functionless, with each meticulously executed sculpture presented in an ebony box that absorbs light and creates stillness around the object; our attention is driven to the quiet elegance of their forms.” Draw + Decal The work of thirteen contemporary clay artists who use imagery and narrative on vessel forms was recently on view at Mudfire Clayworks and Gallery (www.mudfire.com) in Decatur, Georgia. It is impossible to grace the surface of clay without acknowledging thousands of years of history,” states Erik Haagensen, co-director at Mudfire. “Many of the techniques and materials in use today were developed millennia ago, but those leading the field are combining new technologies with fresh viewpoints on design and illustration.” “I am interested that pottery speak about the world,” states Stefan Ritter. “We are surrounded today with sights and sounds, words and culture like never before. I am interested in pottery that reflects this, and is ultimately about us, about human beings, and in reflecting this responds to us emotionally and intellectually. To me a good pot is a sort of poem you can fill with a drink.” Stefan Ritter’s Create Your Own Freedom, 9 in. (23 cm) in height, porcelain with underglazes and glaze, multiple firings to cone 04, 2008. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 20 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 21 exhibitions Harp Overt A solo exhibition of new work by Nicolas Darcourt was recently on view at the Myrna Loy Center for the Performing and Media Arts (www.myrnaloycenter.com) in Helena, Montana. “My work deals with the figure set in a decentered and often compromised context,” states Darcourt. “More non-narrative than narrative, I consider them sculptural collages of hand-built figuration and press molded shapes. These shapes reference architecture, monument, and ornamentation. They make up both the three-dimensional support and act as compositional signifiers of time and place.” “The press molded surface also compliments the handmade, gestural quality I employ when rendering the figure. While one offers exactitude, the other offers spontaneity. I prefer to leave the mark of the hand as I’m hand building figurative elements. I feel it allows for a more personal connection between the viewer and the personality of the piece. “I render the figure according to ideas of balance and rest. But upon further inspection, one begins to recognize moments of tension, strain and limitation. “In my most current body of work, I use the abstracted musical harp as a Nicolas Darcourt’s Sustained Pitch, 20 in. (50 cm) in height, format to further explore combining stoneware, slips, stains, fired to cone 6, 2009. figuration and ornamentation. It’s relevance lies in my view of the harp relating to tension and balance: as it is a stringed instrument, Nicolas Darcourt’s Intermission, 18 in. (46 cm) in height, stoneware, slips, stains, fired to cone 6, 2009. tightened and tuned, and as it commonly stands, upright as a self supporting object.” Looking Forward/Looking Back: Japanese/American Ceramics A group exhibition of works by Naoko Gomi, Ayumi Horie, Hiroshi Nakayama, Akira Satake, and Ikuzi Teraki is on view through September 20 at The Artisan Gallery (www.theartisangallery.com) in Northampton, Massachusetts. “This exhibit features the exuberant and meditative work of ceramic artists of Japanese decent who honor their ties to a rich historical tradition while extending the reach and possibilities of their own ceramics expression,” states the gallery’s director, Patty Arbour. “My goal is to find a voice in creating pieces that are based on my Japanese heritage, explains Hiroshi Nakayama. “I grew up in a quite traditional Japanese house, very basic, simple and beautiful, though I did not feel this way when I was living there. But now I realize this atmosphere deeply influenced me. “I aim for the Japanese idea of beauty, Shibui, a quality of understated elegant simplicity that speaks quietly for itself with inherent meaning and utility, unobtrusive sophistication, refined maturity, spirituality rooted in the quiet appreciation of nature. I am also influenced by the design aesthetics of various countries where I have traveled and lived since leaving Japan at age 25.” Hiroshi Nakayama’s vase form, 11 in. (28 cm) in diameter, stoneware, wood ash glazes, multiple firings, fired to cone 11 in reduction. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 22 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 23 reviews reviews Pieces depicted in rows (from left to right): Victorious, 26 in. (66 cm) in height, 2009; Busker, 28 in. (71 cm) in height, 2009; Invisible Man, 34 in. (86 cm) in height, 2009; Tom Thumb, 34 in. (86 cm) in height, 2009. Images courtesy of the artist and Ferrin Gallery. Androgyny: New Work by Sergei Isupov by Tony Merino that of American painter, Grant Wood. And, like the Russian painter, Marc Chagall, Isupov’s stories are more cryptic than absurd. In Victorious, for example, he paints two lance wielding knights below each of the face’s eyes on one side of the piece, with the eyes standing in for the horses’ heads. Every detail is an emblem. There is a sense of grammar and structure; however, the story is inaccessible. In Isupov’s most complicated images, seen on Tom Thumb, all of these emblems cascade in a crescendo of story telling. The face mixes gender markers; it has a wide and square forehead and a narrow jaw and pointed chin. The piece is covered with a field of warm brownish grays, on which perverse cupids are painted. On the back, Isupov paints a portrait of a masculine woman doing a jig and lifting her skirt. Adding to the complexity of the image, the woman is depicted as a drawing on a flat piece of paper. On the base of the work, Isupov draws an image of eight men doing a Mambo on skis. Isupov saturates the piece with provocative and incendiary symbols. He creates a sense these emblems connect together to create a story, but it is impossible to decipher. Isupov uncannily exploits human nature. The mind abhors a vacuum. With each layer of convention that Isupov strips, he replaces it with a denser, more opaque layer. With no conclusive narrative available, the viewer writes any story they see in the image. The works are psychological portraits, more of the viewer then the subject. the author Tony Merino has lectured and published internationally. Sergei Isupov creates surreal snapshots. All of the pieces included in “Androgyny: New Work by Sergei Isupov,” which was recently on view at the Mesa Contemporary Arts Center (www.mesaartscenter.com/MCA.aspx) in Mesa, Arizona, read as if the artist peels back his subjects’ mask of mores and manners exposing their psyches. The more he reveals, the more he obfuscates. This makes his artwork seductively disingenuous. The core of his work examines what is essential and exterior to his subjects. As the title of the exhibition, “Androgyny,” suggests, Isupov treats his portraits as masks, portraying the ways his subjects choose to present themselves. In the piece, Invisible Man, the subject’s face is depicted as a separate surface, being pulled over the portrait’s head. On the back, the artist draws a masculine woman. As with this piece, most of the works are either ambiguous or mix gender markings. This informs the overarching theme. Gender is just another guise. His images are stylized, not realistic. The absence of physical uniqueness creates an aura of psychological detail. The fact that imagery covers all visible surfaces of the forms combined with the way these works are displayed accents this sense of psychic insight. Isupov paints surreal allegories on the bottom of all of the pieces, which the viewer sees through a mirror below a glass topped pedestal. Beneath Busker, he presents two bald cupids tugging on a man dressed like a girl. Under Invisible Man, Isupov draws four androgynous figures dancing. This creates a severe sense of voyeurism. The viewer becomes a Peeping Tom. Isupov’s pieces reflect the style of two unique Modernist painters. The images in Androgyny have an eerie, neo-gothic look similar to Ceramics Monthly September 2009 24 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 25 reviews Clockwise from top left: Seletti Design’s Versailles Fluó, 2008, manufactured by Seletti SpA; Khashayar Naimanan’s Incognito (Hidden Wealth), 2003, manufactured by Nymphenburg; Insa Doan and Cora Gebauer’s Porcelain Memory, 2007; Job Smeets and Nynke Tynagel’s Biscuit Collection, 2006, manufactured by Royal Tichelaar Makkum; Caroline Slotte’s Blue & White, Landscape Multiple, 2008; Jurgen Bey’s Minutes Tea-Set, 2003 manufactured by Royal Tichelaar Makkum. Object Factory: The Art of Industrial Ceramics by Casey Ruble Upon viewing the exhibition “Object Factory: The Art of Industrial Ceramics,” which is open through September 13 at the Museum of Arts and Design (www.madmuseum.org) in New York, New York, one can’t help but remember that a long-standing lineage—in the case of ceramics, one that dates back to prehistoric times—can be both an asset and a curse. A curse in that wrenching one’s identity out of the past often proves a difficult endeavor; an asset in that such longevity conversely supports myriad developments of that identity. Taken together, the over 200 pieces in this ambitious show, curated by Marek Cecula (himself a ceramic artist), reflect a sort of anxious respect for the tradition of this centuries-old medium, combined with a pointed enthusiasm about its future. As Cecula wrote in his essay for the catalogue, “Ceramics have the power to dissolve the timeline that separates past and present.” Although none of the work in this show was made before the year 2000, the exhibition’s curatorial thrust is rooted in the preceding decades, when, in Cecula’s words, “a new type of ceramic object came into being . . . one that acknowledged the historical evolution of the medium while pointing toward a new synthesis of art, craft, and design.” It was a time marked by increased collaboration between the individual studio and the manufactory: Well-established manufacturers invited artists, designers, and ceramists to realize their projects with the technical support of the institutions; meanwhile, studio ceramists had begun to embrace the advanced technologies and systems of production that industry offered. Like any good marriage, this one spawned a new generation of innovative objects, represented in this exhibition under three different groupings: “Collaborations,” “Altered States,” and “New Territory.” Appropriately, the exhibition’s first room was dedicated to Collaborations—a body of porcelain works made by contemporary designers, artists, and ceramists in collaboration with manufacturers such as Rosenthal and Nymphenburg. Here, various functional objects expressed a range of aesthetic and conceptual approaches, from Lladró design team’s large oval mirror with a dreamy Cinderella-like figure at the base (Re-Deco Large Oval Mirror, manufactured by Lladró) to Job Smeets and Nynke Tynagel’s peace-sign emblazoned cake stand and lid topped by a hand flashing the V sign (Biscuit Collection, manufactured by Royal Tichelaar Makkum). Updating French Rococo, Seletti Design offered Versailles Fluó, a group of decoratively embellished glazed white vessels with one element—a single handle on an urn, a fluted base of a candlestick—colored in splashy neon. Among the most conceptually rigorous works in this group was Incognito (Hidden Wealth), a dinnerware set designed by Khashayar Naimanan and manufactured by Nymphenburg. By counter-intuitively placing the factory mark—the identifier of authenticity and thus value—on the upsides of the pieces, and the decorative imagery on the undersides, Naimanan lays bare the “keeping up with the Joneses” mentality that drives consumption of high-priced goods. Also addressing the complicated assessment of value was Jurgen Bey’s Minutes Tea-Set, manufactured by Royal Tichelaar Makkum. Here, each piece was annotated with the amount of time the worker spent making it and was then priced accordingly, intentionally reducing value to the simple—and problematic—equation of “effort equals worth.” Flanking the Collaborations group were rooms dedicated to Altered States (works involving mass-produced objects manipulated via cutting, Ceramics Monthly September 2009 26 Clockwise from top left: Jo Meester’s Ornamental Inheritance, 2004; Robert Dawson’s Verticality, 2008; Eric Morel’s tea set, 2002; Paul Scott’s Scott’s Cumbrian Blue(s), Foot and Mouth No. 5, 2004, Royal Worcester bone china; Lladró design team’s Re-Deco Large Oval Mirror, 2008; Miriam van der Lubbe’s Tea set, 2001; Tristan Zimmermann’s Phonophone II, 2007; Ami Drach and Dov Ganchrow’s Hot Plate, 2003. knives with hot-isostatic-pressured ceramic blades whose hardness approaches that of diamond; pens with ceramic writing balls covered in hundreds of miniscule cups to improve ink flow (also by Kyocera); and USB memory sticks with porcelain coverings, one of which also comes with an amusingly retro knitted cozy (Insa Doan and Cora Gebauer’s Porcelain Memory). Lest one think that advanced technology precludes visual sophistication, don’t be fooled: The perfect proportions and silky glaze of Tristan Zimmermann’s Phonophone II—a device intended to amplify sound emitted from iPod earphones—make it gorgeous as pure sculpture, and the silk-screened pattern made of heat-conductive metal film on Ami Drach and Dov Ganchrow’s porcelain Hot Plate could stand up to any Bauhaus-approved design. Despite all its reveling in diversity, this exhibition didn’t come off as a glibly enthusiastic sampling of contemporary ceramic work, nor did it succumb to tedious didacticism. And despite a wall text notifying viewers that “many of the ceramic pieces on view in this exhibition are available for sale,” the show never veered toward mere advertisement of purchasable products. Rather, the notification stood as a reminder of the intimate relationship we’ve had with ceramics since time immemorial, from crude clay bowls to catalytic converters, and, more important, of how the merging of industry and artistic innovation inevitably produces objects we just can’t live without. breaking, deforming, and reassembling) and New Territory (functional pieces made of technologically advanced materials such as high-fire zirconium and corundum ceramics). These groups, respectively, suggested a looking back and looking forward. In the former, many pieces acknowledged their fabrication or traditional use. For example, for his porcelain tea set No Title, Eric Morel declined to trim off the slip, instead gilding it to offer a fresh take on ornamentation. Miriam van der Lubbe similarly used gold to embellish her porcelain Tea Set with “stains” such as a drip from the spout and a ring around the saucer’s depression. The ubiquitous blue-and-white ornamental convention was compulsively visited by many artists: Paul Scott offered Scott’s Cumbrian Blue(s), Foot and Mouth No. 5, a Royal Worcester bone-china platter provocatively featuring corpses of cattle slaughtered during the 2001 foot-and-mouth disease scare; on the vases of Ornamental Inheritance, Jo Meesters intermingled traditional floral and windmill motifs with contemporary airplanes, wind turbines, and McDonald’s signs in ultramarine; for Blue & White, Landscape Multiple, Caroline Slotte used a waterjet to cut out portions of imagery on found earthenware plates and placed the pieces atop one another to create a three-dimensional diorama effect. Most impressive was Robert Dawson’s Verticality—a group of 36 plates printed with enlarged portions of Thomas Minton’s famous 1780 willow pattern. Installed on the wall in the shape of a parallelogram, the plates reconfigure this well-worn story of love, death, and resurrection by allowing for gaps in the imagery. Included in the New Territory group were, among other high-tech items, Swiss watches with ceramic cases; Kyocera-brand scissors and the author Casey Ruble works as a freelance art critic and editor and teaches painting and drawing as an artist-in-residence at Fordham University, Lincoln Center campus, New York, New York. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 27 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 28 2009 Undergraduate Showcase Welcome to the second year of the Ceramics Monthly Undergraduate Showcase. It’s gratifying to see that the accomplishment and success of last year’s participants was not a fluke. Clearly, the shaping of the next generation of ceramic artists is in confident hands—those of the instructors as well as the students. After all, isn’t a student the party most responsible for his or her own education? Sometimes we all like to think that it is the versatile nature of clay that encourages such a broad range of practice, but we would be remiss if we did not acknowledge the instructors who encourage students to find their own voice in clay, without favoring a specific technique or stylistic approach. For this reason, we are listing instructors along with the deserving artists and their work—and what a range of work it is! We’re looking forward to what may come next from these newcomers. In the meantime, we extend congratulations to those included in this year’s Showcase, and encouragement to all undergraduate students to participate next year. Enjoy! Ceramics Monthly September 2009 29 Barbara Banfield Sheridan College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning, Oakville, Ontario, Canada Bruce Cochrane, Professor While at Sheridan College my focus has been to explore as much technique and process as possible. The challenging method of soda firing has captured my attention. The random atmosphere and the dynamic glazes lend themselves to creating wheel thrown, altered, and hand-built forms that highlight this technique. My personal interest in the outdoors and traveling allows me to draw visual inspiration from both nature and architecture. The added surface textures combined with the fluid and variegated glazes are much like the snow laden pine trees or the rain pools in a sunken, lichen covered rock. At times, the architectural city-like shapes intersect with the soft natural lines just as the urban and rural landscapes collide. Drawing on the world that surrounds me, these porcelain pots and glazes have become my source of creative expression. Right: Ice bucket, 16 in. (41 cm) in height, soda-fired porcelain, 2009. Below: Serving bowl, 14 in. (36 cm) in diameter, soda-fired porcelain, 2008. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 30 focus college clay Matthew Bright Minnesota State University-Mankato, Mankato, Minnesota Mika Negishi Laidlaw, Assistant Professor; Todd Shanafelt, Associate Professor As an artist, it is my responsibility to influence the viewer to see not just an object, but an expression of myself when looking at my artwork. I am consumed by the completion of my art more than by its purpose. I work with my ideas as rough directions rather than an exact map, therefore, the initial conception of my work rarely matches the end result. Following a strict design or conceptual idea leaves little room for intuitive creativity and inhibits the artistic process by proposing rules or guidelines. My work derives its influences from the industrious man-made world. I am interested in transmuting as many of these influences into each piece while keeping a straightforward yet complex outcome. The reasons behind my work are personal, but the message I am trying to convey is ambiguous. It is up to the viewer to draw their own conclusions as to what my art means to them. My art can never be taken the wrong way because there is no right way to view it or understand it. Above: Failure to Function, 18 in. (46 cm) in height, earthenware, metallic paints, 2009. Left: Transfuse Me, 25 in. (64 cm) in height, stoneware, glaze, glass, metal, fired to cone 05, 2008. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 31 Melanie Blood Massachusetts College of Art and Design, Boston, Massachusetts Janna Longacre, Professor; Ben Ryterband, Professor A moment in time can be captured; however, what remains most important is the memory and existence of that instant. My inspirations have been my grandparents, the longevity of their lives, the existence of time, and the idea of aging. The fear of death and longing lingers in my mind when creating unsustainable works. I am interested in the process of creating, the existence of the piece, and finally the aging and decomposition of it. To me, this evolution can be linked to my grandparents and my time spent with them; never knowing what the future holds and always living in the moment. These circumstances of time result in works that have a history collected through fragments, moments, and, ultimately, memories. Right: Draped Series Arches, 22 in. (56 cm) in height, low-fire slip, soda fired,,2009. Below: Draped Series, Untitled #2, 2 ft. (1.2 m) in length, low-fire slip and cotton batting, 2009. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 32 focus college clay Julie Malen Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri Cary Esser, Professor; George Timock, Professor; Paul Donnelly, Special Instructor My interest in ceramics draws me to analyze the life and character of objects—the idea that possessions can retain the story of human existence. As a result, the scenarios I create in clay combine objects, plants, and animals that tell stories metaphorically. The viewer can derive meaning by asking first what the objects represent, and second what the relationship is between them. Clay is an amorphous and process oriented material that I use to create an impression, not a duplication of reality. The forms of my objects and creatures are based on realism, but I approach the final surfaces loosely to make them more painterly and symbolic. I become lost in creating gestural marks with my fingers and nails. Animal hair becomes as ornamental as the architectural forms that accompany them. I am also deeply inspired by the still life tradition that emerged as its own genre of painting in the 17th century in the Netherlands. The Dutch Masters painted objects from everyday life to deliver an allegorical and moralizing message. Often, I will reference imagery from that era to support the idea that the objects I make are meant to function symbolically. My research into those paintings also becomes a trajectory for themes I find parallels to in modern society. Bull in a China Shop, 75 in. (1.9 m) in length, stoneware, commercial dishes, ceramic decals, found objects, 2009. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 33 Mai Maruo New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University, Alfred, New York Wayne Higby, Professor; Anne Currier, Professor; Andrea Gill, Associate Professor; Chris Miller, Instructor Over time, traditions adjust to people and their lifestyles. The rate of this change may vary within different cultures. In contrast, nature tends to change slowly and universally. Both of these types of change are meaningful to me for different reasons. Exploring Japanese traditional culture allows me to preserve a sense of my identity. I appropriate motifs and patterns not only from kimonos, but also from different cultures. Nature, on the other hand, is a place for me to be neutral. Regardless of what culture I belong to, I can have a mind free of thoughts when I am connected to nature. I am as fascinated by patterns and shapes in nature, as I am by kimono motifs. I have recently become intrigued by soda and salt firing. To me, these are similar to performing in front of an audience, because the outcome of each firing varies according to the conditions both inside and outside the kiln. Above: Bowl, 11 in. (28 cm) in diameter, soda-fired porcelain. Below: Jewelry box, 4.5 in. (11 cm) in height, soda-fired porcelain. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 34 Timo Fahler Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri Cary Esser, Professor; George Timock, Professor; Tom Binger, Instructor and Technician My recent work investigates the interplay between the interior architecture of an object and the exterior surface it projects. My intention is to create visceral sculptures that expose the elegance of their skin while revealing the complexity of their anatomy. Utilizing a variety of textures allows me to expose this interaction. The details of the surface, whether organic or geometric, complete the structure’s form. My choice of a subdued palette draws the immediate focus to the surface, while the stark contrast of shadow accentuates the elaborate interior. The unpredictable forms that evolve within the landscape provide us with a blueprint of the earth’s evolution. Geology and the earth’s topography influence my methods, as well as my formal design. Right: Layered Archetype B, 17 in. (43 cm) in height, slip cast and thrown porcelain, stoneware, black underglaze, fired to cone 10 in reduction. Left: Porcelain Archetype, 35 in. (89 cm) in height, slip cast, press molded porcelain, fired to cone 10 in reduction. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 35 Brenda Danbrook The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia Janet DeBoos, Head of Workshop Finding art within functional pottery has become my passion. I begin a piece by considering the shape, rims, and space, with rhythmic patterns creating relationships between forms. When people see my work, I’d like them to see confident, considered, elegant forms with engaging relationships developed through arrangement in larger compositions. I know an exhibit of my work is complete when it creates a collective voice greater than the sum of its parts. The language of form allows a dialog to develop between individual pieces. It is this conversation that excites me. Repetition unifies the forms and subtle variations highlight individual qualities. It is often through the smallest change that engagement occurs; the undulation of a rim, the fineness of edges, and the volume suggested by a change of profile. My recent work has been soda glazed. Aided by the fire, the composition of the clay body determines glaze surface, color, and responsiveness. Shades of gray through white with saturated rich honey brown creates tonal and color harmonies. The addition of a graphic element through the use of striped surfaces creates visual tensions that render the groupings more contemporary in feel. Above: Composition of Eight, 16 in. (41 cm) in height (tallest), wheel-thrown stoneware, iron glaze, soda fired to cone 10. Below: Composition of Fourteen, 16 in. (14 cm) in height (tallest), wheel-thrown stoneware and porcelain, wax resist glaze and soda glaze, fired to cone 10. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 36 focus college clay Angee Verzani-Dorcey University of South Dakota, Vermillion, South Dakota Michael Hill, Artist-in-Residence Conceptually, it is my intention to physically preserve a celebration, capture a moment, and honor the functional form. The works I create are artifacts that intuitively evoke cherished memories, rituals, and special occasions that we experience throughout life. I desire the journey of clay and possess a passion for functional ware and the qualities it offers; plasticity, durability, and longevity. Initially, my interest was strictly in utilitarian forms, but I have grown to appreciate the appeal and messages conveyed by nontraditional forms. This approach has encouraged me to expand my interpretation of this art form through graceful transformations of the functional form. Many dualities arise in the work, which only enhance the aesthetic appeal and intrigue the viewer. The applications of thick slips create a surreal and extreme texture that I find enticing. Senses are stimulated by the delicious surface and the hazardous edges. Right: 3-Tier Cake, 15 in. (38 cm) in height, stoneware with slips and glaze, fired to cone 10, 2009. Below: Bread tray, 18 in. (46 cm) in length, stoneware with slips and glaze, fired to cone 10, 2009. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 37 Deborah Freeman Sheridan College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning, Oakville, Ontario, Canada Bruce Cochrane, Professor I produce functional ceramic ware that has been inspired by my wilderness travels throughout Canada. These trips have produced an interest in natural processes and materials. As a result, my work is often about the methods used to form and fire the work, as well as the raw materials themselves. Many of my forms and imagery are based on historical references from Japanese tea ceremony ware of the Momoyama period (16th and 17th centuries). The majority of my work is wheel thrown and altered. Process marks are intentionally left or enhanced as a way to further communicate with users and to explore the materials themselves. Contrasting clays are sometimes used to emphasize individual materials and their properties. Atmospheric firings such as wood and soda play a large role in completing pieces and deepen the dialogue about process. Above: Double Condiment, 12 ½ in. (32 cm) in length, thrown, altered, and assembled stoneware (with cellulose fiber, nut shells, feldspar chips and grog) and porcelain, soda-fired, 2009. Below: Momoyama Liquor Set, 10 in. (25 cm) in width, thrown, altered, and assembled stoneware (with cellulose fiber, nut shells, feldspar chips, and grog) and porcelain, soda-fired, 2008. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 38 focus college clay Travis Winters Buffalo State College, Buffalo, New York Robert Wood, Professor As a child I spent a lot of my time exploring the woods that were right in my backyard, which is why I have always been drawn to the organic beauty of nature. By looking at the world around us, we can begin to see how some objects have been affected by imperfections. Many trees, plants, and animals have evolved because of mutations that proved beneficial. Evolution and the theory of natural selection have shaped our planet from a few organisms into many life forms. My work has always been about our surroundings and the different abnormalities that occur within nature, sometimes grotesque and sometimes beautiful. With these latest pieces, I am portraying objects that look as if they are natural entities that have evolved from trees into unusual organic forms. Right: Cinched, 14 in. (33 cm) in height, wood-fired stoneware, 2009. Below: Nebula, 10 in. (25 cm) in height, raku fired, 2009. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 39 NCECA 2009 Regional Student Juried Exhibition Bent tray, 23 in. (58 cm) in length, by David Eichelberger, University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Jessica Orlowski, Student Director at Large The National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) “Regional Student Juried Exhibition” (RSJE) is often cited as one of the best shows the council’s national conference has to offer. The 2009 RSJE, hosted by the Tempe Center for the Arts, continued this tradition. But do not let the S mislead you. These are not works hesitantly emerging from the classroom, but bold representations of the next generation of ceramics. Unencumbered by the expectations of the ceramic world, students are free to explore and grow in a way that is enviable. Without the pressures of post-graduation gallery representation, making a living, etc., they are simply motivated by the love of clay. The RSJE then selects the best of the young talent available to create a dynamic and inspiring show. With the accessibility of the Internet, it is becoming imperative for young artists to have a web presence. When Googled, does this artist have their own web page? Exhibition listings? However, no matter how well constructed, a web presence cannot be the only link between their art and the world. Just as the impact of an impasto style painting is lost in digital replications, so is much of the depth of color and texture that can be achieved in ceramic work. (Though tempting, especially for fellow ceramic artists visiting the RSJE, touching was prohibited.) This exhibition and those like it Ceramics Monthly September 2009 40 focus college clay are therefore essential, not only offering students the professional opportunity to interact with galleries outside their school, but also to allow their work the close examination it needs and deserves. Though historically a successful exhibition, the RSJE is in the midst of undertaking exciting self-improvements. At the 2010 conference in Philadelphia, the student juried exhibition will fully embrace its democratic potential by going national. This already inspiring showcase of young talent will become an even greater opportunity for emerging artists to introduce their work to the clay world. Much like the students it represents, the exhibi- Above: Orb Cluster, 15 in. (38 cm) in height, by Amanda Pless, Arizona State University. Above right: Childbearing Hips, 18 in. (46 cm) in height, by Shenny Cruces, San Francisco State University. Right: Set of Shells 1, each approximately 2 in. (5 cm) in diameter, by Duncan Tweed, Northern Arizona University. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 41 At the 2010 conference in Philadelphia, the student juried exhibition will fully embrace its democratic potential by going national. —Jessica Orlowski, NCECA Student Director at Large Binary in Nature, 36 in. (91 cm) in height, by Jason Harper, Kansas State University; NCECA Undergraduate Award for Student Excellence. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 42 tion is taking risks to engage participants and viewers alike. The “2010 NCECA National Student Juried Exhibition” is the next step in this evolution—and it won’t stop there. For information on how to submit your work to the “2010 NCECA National Student Juried Exhibition” (regardless of your state of residence), see www.nceca.net. Michaelene Walsh, Juror An exciting aspect of teaching and attending NCECA every year is seeing how students are responding to the material in refreshing ways. Growth from year to year is exponential due to the variety of resources available to artists; sharing images, ideas and information has never been easier. Given this level of exchange, I was happy to find amidst the juried work a respect for the traditions of utility, figurative work, and—in particular this year—wood firing. The variety of work to choose from seemed a sure sign that the spectrum of ceramic expression is healthy and well. I have always appreciated that both new approaches and traditional forms of expression can coexist and thrive simultaneously at NCECA. It’s as if the material were an analog for democracy itself. Michaelene Walsh Associate Professor of Art Louisiana State University Geoffrey Wheeler, Juror I was honored and delighted when asked to co-jury the 2009 NCECA Regional Student Exhibition. I have been attending NCECA for many years and the annual student show is always one of my favorite exhibitions at the conference. It is this exhibition that reflects Top: Mezcal Cantaro and Reliquary, 11 in. (28 cm) in height, by Trevor Dunn, Utah State University. Right: Square flower brick, 5½ in. (14 cm) in height, by Lauren Clay, Wichita State University. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 43 Self Portrait, 15 in. (38 cm) in height, by Darien Johnson, Arizona State University. Lidded jar, 9 in. (23 cm) in height, by Seth Green, University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Patterns #3, 15 in. (38 cm) in length, by Suching Chen, Arizona State University. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 44 focus college clay Untitled, by Lee Mattingly, Wichita State University. Cup and saucer, 4 in. (10 cm) in height, by Autumn Cipala, University of Nebraska-Lincoln. today’s ceramics education and points to the future of the ceramics arts. It inevitably has some of the best work shown at the conference. Looking through the submitted work for the first time, I was impressed with the variety of approaches and the high quality of the majority of the work. I have never participated in jurying an exhibition of this scope. I had worried that it would be impossible to compare and decide between work as diverse as a wood-fired functional pot, and a conceptually driven installation piece. However, while certainly there were difficult decisions to make, it came down to clarity of intention, quality of execution and whether there was a distinctive personal voice in the piece. As jurors we wanted to assemble an exhibition that reflected the vast array of possibilities of expression within the field of ceramic art, yet nothing was selected solely for the purpose of filling a niche. I would like to applaud each and every student who submitted work to this exhibition. Jumping through the hoops required for entering an exhibition like this is a learning experience in itself. Working with Michaelene Walsh to search through the 300 or so submissions to select the final pieces was a pleasure. Ultimately, we were unanimous in our choices, and I feel we had a very strong exhibition. Congratulations to those of you selected. And to those of you who were not, please understand that a juried exhibition is always, to some extent, a reflection of the jurors’ tastes and biases. Geoffrey Wheeler Associate Professor, Ceramics University of Wisconsin-Stout Contraposto, 17 in. (43 cm) in height, by Joel Schroeder, Utah State University. Clover Dishes, to 10 in. (25 cm) in width, by Joe Singewald, Southern Utah University. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 45 more more is Lorna Meaden by Stephanie Lanter Punch bowl, 19 in. (48 cm) in height, thrown and altered porcelain, soda fired to cone 10, 2008. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 46 Ms. Meaden is going to buy the flow“the cadence of daily life ers herself—and the punch and the whisky and the gravy and the sugar is punctuated by situations and the lemonade and the tea and the that revolve around candles and the ice and everything eating and drinking.” else. There’s going to be a party. And at this party, unlike Andrea –Lorna Meaden del Sarto’s assertion that, “less is more, Lucrezia” (Robert Browning, “Faultless Painter,” 1855) less isn’t more. More is more. And perhaps ductor’s hand. Lively mishima (inlaid slip) Mies Van Der Rohe and Coco lines crescendo up the curving volume Chanel got it wrong anyway; maybe of the piece, repeated in refrain and rest in this poem del Sarto was simply around the belly, ending up at the top of referring to his wife’s infidelity rather the lid in a knob of melodramatic vibrato. than declaring an aesthetic trump. Never a dull moment at this event! Time Regardless, Lorna Meaden’s most to unstack the whisky cups, unstop the distinctive functional works defy flask, put away the bucket! (See Whiskey this Modernist mantra in more ways Bucket, p. 48) than one. On a more serious note, Meaden is fasLots of pots allude to social circinated by how “the cadence of daily life cumstances or celebrate community Lorna Meaden making a punch bowl at the Archie Bray is punctuated by situations that revolve meals, but few so equally mirror and Foundation for the Ceramic Arts. around eating and drinking.” To date, her design social structures. Few can most dynamic aesthetic examinations involve the more indulgent, actually physically engage as many individuals at once as these festive ingesta. Perhaps this is because the ritual consumption of can. Gratifications invite and then reward, disperse from their tidy more “dangerous” delights bears a more complex cadence. She can places in containers or on hooks; set free for enjoyment by the naturally apply her passion for ornament and relish, and demand hostess. Like the porcelain on her beloved wheel, a fete containsensitivity of her guests. For here, a spoonful of medicine makes the ing one of Meaden’s punch bowls would simply revolve around sugar even sweeter: sharp points, thin wire attachments and handles it. You know a pot has character when, in merely beholding it, must be encountered with the same gentle tempo and delicacy visions of shoulder rubbing, sparkling socialites appear (eight in with which Meaden made them. Though the repeated candy-like this case), and into the ear float bits of conversation. One can glaze drips beg for impulsive finger licking, they also, in their very feel the tension as guests inch closer to that seductive black ladle, “frozen” nature, join in the chorus of their ceramic family, singing vying with clinking cups in hand for more beverage but behav“Stop right there! Slow down . . .” Quick, clumsy removal of the ing to preserve the balance of the occasion, the fragility of the lid or spoons will yield no satisfaction, might even lead to fracture. edges. For not only are human borders breakable—clay on clay The beauty of this active—possibly even didactic—metaphor is, demands attention. ironically, its muteness. Perhaps invoked by the piece’s pattern of diamonds or the tiny Part of the charm of Meaden’s work, despite this layered denscepter heads dotting the rim, a jester, costumed in patchwork and sity, is in fact its soft volume. Characteristically, it is comprised pinstripe, will creep in and crash the scene. This symbolic twin to of a color palette that is rich and bright but not loud, a sense of the king, sprung from the bowels of the bowl, may begin a rant, proportion that is formal but not formidable, and a surface that is playfully, interpreting current dramas, overturning common nopretty but not pristine. A result of Meaden’s nostalgic motivation tions, waxing poetic, his role as fool giving him immunity to the to honor family and heirlooms of her heritage, the blend makes confines of propriety. sense. Learning to sew as a child, surrounded in her home by 18th Even without the intoxicated company, however, the large, century silver and Western European porcelain, Meaden combines fleshy, green tureen seems to spin on its black platter base like a the austerity of these mannered vessels with the sensibility of a carnival ride, animated mugs flying, missing only the blinking seamstress. She imbues many of her pots with elegantly lifted feet, lights and the music. textile-like motifs (in terms of dividing and decorating the form) Yet rhythm pervades. In another corner of the warm, glowand the antique, “used and loved” aura that the soda kiln bestows ing room, near the coffee or tea, maybe, five spoons encircle the upon appropriately placed, action-packed slips and glazes. Bringing undulating perimeter of Meaden’s lidded sugar bowl, waiting for together metal and fabric, the industrial and the handmade, the their choreographic cue. Echoing the bowl’s rim, the horizontal subtle and the jovial, Meaden creates a world that is sophisticated line of its scalloping saucer lifts and falls like the wave of a conCeramics Monthly September 2009 47 Above: Whiskey Bucket, 12 in. (30 cm) in height, thrown and altered porcelain, soda fired to cone 10, 2008. Left: Lidded jar, 11 in. (28 cm) in height, thrown and altered porcelain, soda fired to cone 10, 2008. Colorado for eight years before receiving her MFA from Ohio University in Athens. Since graduating in 2005, she has not left the ceramics fast track for an instant. She has had teaching positions at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville and San Juan College in New Mexico, and artist residencies at the Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts and the Anderson Ranch Arts Center. Somehow throughout all this, she managed to, in her words, “apply to every show I could,” and it paid off. In addition to being a featured demonstrator at the 2008 NCECA Conference, she is represented by numerous U.S. clay galleries. She has had a positive response to her elaborate works like these as well as cups, tumblers, bowls, plates, pitchers, teapots, cruet sets, salt and pepper shakers—you name it. From giving workshops to developing her website, Meaden is now a long way from the days of, “making round pots and putting blue glazes on them.” Stitching the first epiphany she had at a Julia Galloway workshop years ago to the values and insights embedded by mentor Brad Schwieger, she intends the studio and life she is now building to be based on balance. But, amid all of this more, and more, and do it all, and more, how does one find balance? Whisky and gravy certainly don’t help much in but friendly, geometric and organic. It is the type of tension necessarily present in any successful creative work. She finds comfort in patching together unlikely academic/historical influences as well as personal ones. Not only do Baroque, Victorian, and pastoral French and English serving sets play a role, but classical celadons from Song Dynasty China, flashing slips of the “Mingei-sota” potters, and Islamic designs present themselves. “It is such an American thing to pull from anywhere and everywhere you want to, referencing whatever you damn well please,” she says, quite accurately. This desire to reconcile differences and to pack as much into the pots as possible might also stem from her career path, which recently has poised her in a spot similar to her subject matter—overflowing with promise. Meaden has an array of experiences to quilt together, to make sense of for herself. She was a studio potter in tiny Durango, Ceramics Monthly September 2009 48 the long term—not to diminish their importance— but they can remind us of some things. Cultural mores, for instance. I fire in heavy reduction until James Trilling, author cone 9 is down. I then close of The Language of Ornathe damper of the kiln, and ment, (London: Thames turn up the gas. This produces & Hudson, 2001) posed unused fuel in the atmosphere the idea that craft has of the kiln, trapping carbon on become a symbol, a word the surface of the pots. Then, synonymous with beauty. I spray a soda ash solution In reality, before the into the kiln. I use a large Industrial Revolution, amount of soda and water everything was made by (5 lb soda ash to 3 gallons of hand (crafted), and cerwater) and spray it in all at tainly this aspect in and once. Afterwards, I let the of itself didn’t make these kiln gain temperature until objects beautiful. Only cone 10 is down. The finishing now, as Trilling describes step is creating an oxidizing it, “in the flattering glow atmosphere to brighten the of nostalgia,” do we categorize the handmade this color of the glazes. way. In the past, people had craft like they had air. But not every day did they get liquor, cream or honey; wear jewelry or act with gaiety. Meaden, by perpetuating these extras—these top layers, in diet, in garment, in behavior—via carefully crafted ornamental pots, pays homage to the extravagant, the purposefully beautiful. She achieves this decadence through virtuosity in throwing, altering, and handbuilding with porcelain, using textured press molds, and laboring intensely over layer by incised, scraped, brushed, resisted, and dipped layer. Demarcating these surface spaces—searching for order—is her biggest challenge, but symmetry and traditional patterns assist. Cadence runs through the assemblage of the wet and fired parts as well. But the beat is speeding up: her details are increasing. So, however, are the demands for Lorna’s work. Right now, she is “desperately trying to avoid having a list of pots I’m supposed to make hanging on the wall next to my wheel.” Another definition of balance, like the one you have in your checking account (right?), isn’t associated with equality, with canceling out. The weight is clearly on one side of the triple beam. Everyone wants steadiness, but, to resurrect the pre-party literature of del Sarto, (via Robert Browning), “A man’s reach should exceed his grasp . . . . Or what’s a heaven for?” Ms. Meaden, get ready. The party must go on, and it might go late. a very fine line by Lorna Meaden Mishima pottery comes from the Japanese Island of Mishima, but it was originally transported from Korea around the 16th century. This surface design technique is a way of drawing by inlaying a slip of contrasting color into lines incised in leather-hard clay. To create very fine lines, I use the sharpest knife I can find—a disposable scalpel—to draw on leather-hard pots. Then I fill in the etched lines with black slip, allow it to become leather hard, and scrape it off with a metal rib. After the pots are bisque fired, I then go back and divide up the space, using wax and latex glaze resist to create sections of color. For more information on Lorna Meaden and her work, visit her website, www.lornameaden.com. the author Stephanie Lanter, is currently Visiting Catron Professor of Art at Washburn University in Topeka, Kansas. For more information, see www.stephanielanter.com. Pitcher, 10 in. (25 cm) in height, thrown porcelain, soda fired to cone 10, 2008. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 49 monthly Methods Soda firing for depth and brightness The MFA Factor Our profiles of graduate-study programs in ceramics continue with a look at an East Coast school. Tyler School of Art, Temple University The graduate program in ceramics seeks highly motivated students with a strong undergraduate background within the traditions of the discipline. Students are expected to demonstrate both conceptual and technical excellence, as well as a profound interest in studio research and experimentation. Tyler’s philosophy emphasizes the investigation and articulation of concepts leading to a high level of personal inquiry, resulting in work that challenges and extends the traditional boundaries of the media and their accepted definitions. Students have access to state of the art facilities and tools while enjoying an interdisciplinary education. The program provides weekly contact with major faculty, ongoing informal critiques with faculty, formal critiques and evaluations twice a semester, and an interdisciplinary graduate thesis committee. There are also significant teaching opportunities and study abroad programs available in Rome, Japan, India, and Scotland, among others. The visiting artists seminar enhances the curriculum by bringing nationally renowned artists and critics working in a variety of media and venues to the campus for lectures, workshops, and student tutorials on a weekly basis. In addition to the visiting artists invited to the campus, the surrounding community itself is rich with opportunities in the visual and performing arts. Philadelphia is home to an active, contemporary art scene that includes internationally renowned museums, commercial galleries, art centers, and residency programs. Coupled with the close proximity to New York City, our graduate students find that they have easy access to some of the most important research resources in contemporary art. Tyler [faculty] Chad Curtis Chad Curtis, assistant professor of ceramics, holds a BFA from Minnesota State University, Mankato, and an MFA from New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University. He specializes in mixed-media sculpture and installation, mold making, slip casting, and digital fabrication. Above: Popup Camper with Tree, 45 in. (114 cm) in height, glazed ceramic fired to cone 04 in an electric kiln, clay slip, acrylic, milled foam, epoxy, wood, and mixed media, 2008. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 50 Facilities Highlights • new facility opened January 2009 • 150-square-foot private studios with wireless Internet connections Nicholas Kripal • 5 gas kilns • 10 electric kilns • 26 kick and electric wheels • 4 clay mixers, 1 dough mixer • 3 slab rollers • 10-gallon glaze mixer • walk-in spray booth • 3D printer • glaze lab • mold making room • critique and exhibition space • outdoor kiln and work pad • all spaces forklift accessible with 100psi compressed air Program Details • 2-year program Nicholas Kripal, professor, chair of crafts department, head of ceramics area, is a ceramic sculptor working in site-related installations and sculpture. Kripal received his BFA from the University of Nebraska, Kearney, an MS in Art Education and an MFA from Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville. Above: W.S. Variation #5, 44 in. (112 cm) in length, slipcast porcelain, fired to cone 6 in an electric kiln, 2007. • Solo thesis exhibition required • 40+ applicants per year • 3 accepted graduates per year • 2 teaching assistantships • Cost (tuition and fees)/year: In state: $17,760; Out of state: $26,160 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 51 THE MFA FACTOR Tyler [grad students] jonathan dickstein I took seven years off before attending graduate school. Now I’m using my time in school to develop a keen understanding of where my work fits in terms of space, venue, and audience. After graduate school, I intend to pursue residency opportunities and part-time university teaching positions. lauren dombrowiak The urban Philadelphia setting and amazing new facilities are the reasons I initially chose Tyler. I find that the faculty’s involvement in challenging my mind and the work I create is why I love this program. Being pushed to use my ceramic knowledge in whatever media I need, and to do this in an intelligent way, is the backbone of the program. kate dowell I knew as an undergraduate that I wanted to continue into a graduate program, so I took only a year off in order to research schools and focus on making my application competitive. I chose to study here because The Tyler School of Art offers an interdisciplinary approach to art making in a city with a rich art culture. elaine quave I was out of school for two years before I went back to get my MFA. I chose Tyler because it has great faculty and it is located in a city that has a lot of resources and an interesting art scene. “The interdisciplinary attitude and community created raise the bar to a higher sense of art making that still has a home in craft.”— L. Dombrowiak Ceramics Monthly September 2009 52 Otto Heino 1915–2009 by Don Pilcher Otto Heino died on July 16th in California at the age of 94. For seven decades, most of them in collaboration with his wife Vivika, he pursued the goals of the American studio crafts movement. Like others in his generation, he came of age in the Great Depression and survived military service in WWII. After the war he returned to New Hampshire and took pottery classes from Vivika. They soon married and began their journey as one of the most prominent and successful couples in American ceramic history. As potters and teachers they shaped two younger generations; and they left an exceptional legacy of students, awards and pottery, much of it held in museums around the world. The Heinos succeeded at destination marketing as long ago as the 1950s. A stop at their studio wasn’t just about buying pottery. You were offered fresh coffee and invited to sit in their beautiful garden. You heard stories of Otto’s latest movie appearance (as a potter in The Egyptians) or of Vivika’s new ramekins. Years later, in Ojai, their grounds included a citrus grove, peacocks, a koi pond, and numerous exotic cacti. All of this complemented their pottery and Otto would give you as much of his time as you wanted. For reasons about which we can only guess (perhaps generational), Otto saw his entire life as exceptional and he understood that the exceptional was compelling to onlookers. There was a bit of peacock in him. He spoke eagerly and often about how many pounds of clay he could throw, how hot he fired the kiln, how many pots he sold in an afternoon and how no one could quite match this or that glaze from his studio. He had a million such stories; some of them were true. Ironically, he seldom if ever used his most famous glaze, Otto’s Texture, but many a young professor rode that recipe to tenure, yet never met him. To me, these stories were not central to his merits as a potter or a man. If you wanted the best of Otto you would do well to watch what he did; it was by his actions that he ennobled the potter’s art. He threw with a directness and tenderness that was unchanged whether it was a small bottle or huge jar. His wheel rotated slowly and his hands moved slower still, coaxing, cajoling the form and ultimately compressing the rim. His signature move was always a compressed rim—his emphatic statement of his affection for the clay—“Otto was here.” He nodded his head in time to the wheel’s rotation; and he finished each pot with a flick of his wet hand back into his water bowl. Watching Otto fire a kiln was a master class in patience, observation, and care. He used multiple cone packs and an hourly firing log with date, weather conditions, gas pressure, damper settings, a visual description of flames, and a thermocouple reading. I never saw a potter more reluctant to turn off a kiln. It was as if he were having an affair with the fire. In the final hour of a firing he never left the kiln and he seldom spoke. He observed, he tinkered, he straightened a few stray kiln posts, and he waited. Then he’d announce, “Well, kiln’s off.” The Heinos had no children of their own, but they naturally enough embraced many of us as surrogates. Vivika could be possessive but Otto was simply patient, hopeful, and full of encouragement. He was unfailingly optimistic, in spite of circumstances, and certain that good things were only as far away as the next kiln load. He would never directly criticize your work. Rather, he’d tell you how you could make it better, “Maybe the best in the world.” Sometimes a trip with Otto to the state liquor store in New Hampshire was good for an insight into his philosophy. Round trip it was eleven miles of conversation and he became talkative without Vivika in the car. It was his belief that people wanted his pots because they just naturally loved clay and his job was to give them clay. His aesthetic was simple. A fusion of Scandinavian and Japanese sensibility created a background for his confident and spontaneous touch—with clay, with brush, with fire. His pots were swelling with “life and lift,” as he called it, and he celebrated the circular finger trails so typical of studio pottery of the day, perhaps to a fault. But Otto was nothing if not dependable and thorough. His pots all had unmistakable heft and a finish that was both sophisticated and hand made, precise yet vigorous. Such aesthetics might seem a little too romantic in our ironic age, but Otto and his generation were the people who breathed life into the movement that sustains so many potters today. No small thing. And for those of us who have enjoyed the blessing of time spent with him- well, we have an exceptional example that should sustain us for the rest of our lives. Above: Large vase, 18 in. (46 cm) in height, stoneware, with lemon yellow glaze, fired with gas and wood. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 53 Joseph Pintz’s Hand-Hewn Pots by Casey Ruble Oval boxes, to 12 in. (30 cm) in length, handbuilt earthenware, fired to cone 02 in an electric kiln, 2008. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 54 photos: Down to Earth: When talking about his work, Joseph Pintz often begins by describing his childhood in Chicago—a place most people associate with gritty urban life. But Pintz’ story differs from many Chicago natives. He was born the third of four children to immigrants who, during World War II, fled from the Russian army as it advanced on the rural Hungarian countryside his ancestors had settled some 300 years previously. Both sets of Pintz’ grandparents made a living working with their hands—his maternal grandfather as a blacksmith and his paternal grandparents as farmers. In Chicago, Pintz was similarly raised to value a close connection to the land: He grew up harvesting vegetables in the narrow suburban plot behind his house, picking cherries for homemade jam and baking loaves of sourdough in the drywall-mud pans his father brought home from his job as a union painter. Holidays and other celebrations were spent with many generations of family and friends, and preparations for the feasts began days in advance. The combination of groundedness and generosity that marked Pintz’ upbringing also comes through in his ceramic Joe Pintz refines the outer surface of a bowl in his studio at Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, Ohio. Nesting bowls, to 12½ in. (32 cm) in diameter, handbuilt earthenware, fired to cone 02 in an electric kiln, 2008. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 55 Ricer, 13 in. (33) in length, handbuilt earthenware, terra sigillata and washes, fired to cone 02 in an electric kiln, 2009. recipes work, which explores the role that domestic objects play in fulfilling our needs on a physical and emotional level. Made from a coarse, high-iron Nebraska brick clay, Pintz’ pieces—plates, cups, and bowls; bakeware and kitchen utensils; toolboxes and feeding troughs for animals—are devoid of decorative embellishment and craftiness. Their character is humble and straightforward, reflecting a basic tenet of Shaker design, and one of Pintz’ major influences: If it is useful and necessary, free yourself from imagining that you need to enhance it by adding what is not an integral part of its usefulness or necessity. . . . If it is both useful and necessary and you can recognize and eliminate what is not essential, then go ahead and make it as beautifully as you can. For Pintz, making it as beautifully as you can entails foregoing the wheel in favor of carving most pieces out of solid clay—a process that lends his work literal and symbolic weight and, by virtue of the trimming marks and subtle inconsistencies of the hand, accentuates the negative spaces, giving them a physical presence and emotional charge they wouldn’t otherwise have. His surface treatments range in color from neutrals to earthy pinks, greens, yellows, and blues, and they contribute to the handcrafted feel. He layers a combination of terra sigillata, slips, and brushed-on glazes, which produces a patinated effect where the red of the clay peeks through in places. The overall aesthetic sensibility seems guided by an appreciation of the material’s raw form and its possibilities; when looking at Pintz’ “pots,” one doesn’t forget that they, like the food they hold, originate from the earth itself. Raw Earthenware Clay Body (Cone 04–02) Wollastonite. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.0% Cedar Heights Redart. . . . . . . . . . . . 12.5 Carbondale Red . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.5 Endicott Potting Clay. . . . . . . . . . . . 70.0 100.0% Add:Grog (coarse and fine). . . . 15–25.0% Add ¼ cup barium carbonate to a 100 lb batch of this clay body to prevent scumming. Hirsh Satin Matt Base (Cone 04–02) Gerstley Borate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32% Lithium Carbonate. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Whiting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Nepheline Syenite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 EPK Kaolin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Silica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 100% Add:Bentonite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2% Color Variations: Green: Chrome Oxide . . . . . . . . . 1% Yellow: Yellow Stain. . . . . . . . . . . 8% Light Blue: Copper Carbonate . . 1.5% Ceramics Monthly September 2009 56 by Joseph Pintz During graduate school, I began experimenting with clay from a local brick manufacturer (Endicott Clay Products, Fairbury, Nebraska). Their “potting clay” has great working characteristics—plasticity, density and a rich color. It also has the benefit of not being over-processed. With a few minor alterations, the clay that was sent down the conveyor belt to make bricks has become the backbone of my clay body (see recipe on page 56). I employ a handful of rudimentary handbuilding techniques to create my forms. I pound soft clay over bisque molds with a mallet to establish basic shapes, such as bowls. Paper patterns are used to create more delicate forms, such as cups, and thicker forms (toolboxes and plates) are carved from a solid block. Although working reductively is not always practical, it allows me to find the form more intuitively. Once the clay stiffens to a leather-hard stage, forms are trimmed and refined further. This dredges up the coarse grog within the clay and creates a unique texture. Once the clay dries to a bone dry state, I brush on several layers of slip or terra sigillata. After bisque firing, I apply glazes to create subtle, weathered surfaces that suggest a history of use. The work is then fired in an electric kiln to cone 02. Joseph Pintz currently teaches ceramics at Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, Ohio, and is represented by Turman Larison Contemporary (www.turmanlarison.com) in Helena, Montana. To see more of Pintz’ work, visit www.iconpottery.com. Portions of this article were originally printed in Ceramic Excellence, the 2006–07 fellowship exhibition catalog for the Archie Bray Foundation, where Casey Ruble was invited as a visiting critic. Ridged Press, 7.5 in. (19 cm) in length, handbuilt earthenware, with terra sigillata and washes, fired to cone 02 in an electric kiln, 2009. the author Casey Ruble works as a freelance art critic and editor and teaches painting and drawing as an artist-in-residence at Fordham University, Lincoln Center campus, New York, New York. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 57 Monthly Methods Hand-Hewn Pottery Pintz’ work ranges from functional to nonfunctional. His bowls, for example, are the perfect size for morning oatmeal, whereas his toolboxes are more metaphorical—too heavy to be carried to a work site. But the two groups of work don’t occupy extreme ends of the spectrum: The nonfunctional objects still speak of utility, and the weight of the functional pieces renders them unwieldy, pushing them toward sculpture. Adhering to sculptor Isamu Noguchi’s belief that “everything is sculpture,” Pintz considers himself both a craftsperson and an artist. “I don’t believe in a hierarchy of one type of my work over another,” he comments. “I see my functional dinnerware and my sculpture as different sides of the same coin.” Interestingly, Pintz’ interest in clay grew out of his undergraduate studies in anthropology at Northwestern University. It was there that he first noticed how the medium of clay has been used across centuries of civilizations, running the gamut from the mundane to the extraordinary—from the simple pottery of early cultures to the high-tech heat-shield tiles used on space shuttles. After finishing his undergraduate degree, Pintz undertook post-baccalaureate studies in ceramics at Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville and then attended graduate school at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, where he broadened his scope by researching a variety of utilitarian objects from around the world. In 2007, he was awarded a residency and Lincoln Fellowship at the Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts—a former brickyard and a fitting place for someone who works with brick clay. From the beginning of his work with clay, however, Pintz was drawn to making pottery with a close relationship to food. “Sharing meals with others and making the time to eat well are ideals I try to live up to in my daily life,” he explains. Indeed, the stubborn physicality of his pieces forces the user to slow down and pay close attention to the moment (coffee in one of his cups is best sipped using both hands) and their uniformity and seriality take on metaphoric potential, with connotations of community, abundance, and prosperity. Further, the symbiotic relationship Pintz eloquently establishes between volume and negative space reflects the basic nature of sustenance. As the English poet Philip James Bailey wrote, “Simplicity is nature’s first step, and the last of art.” Pintz’ work embodies this idea with a down-to-earth directness, reminding us that the container is just as essential as what we put in it. call for entries international exhibitions September 1, 2009 entry deadline Texas, Corpus Christi “Call for exhibition proposals for 2009–2010 exhibition schedule.” Contact Brooke Fitzpatrick, K Space Contemporary, PO Box 545, Corpus Christi, TX 78403; info@kspacecontemporary.org; www.kspacecontemporary.org; 361-887-6834. September 5, 2009 entry deadline Washington, Kirkland “Clay? III” (March 18–May 5, 2010). Juried from digital. Fee: $25 for three entries. Jurors: Doug Jeck, Akio Takamori, and Jamie Walker. Contact Kirkland Arts Center, 620 Market St, Kirkland, WA 98033; info@kirklandartscenter.org; www.kirklandartcenter.org; 425-822-7161. Deadlines for Exhibitions, Fairs and Festivals September 15, 2009 entry deadline California, Santa Ana “Muddy’s Wood Fire Classic” (October 30–November 27, 2009). Juried from digital or slides. Fee: $30 for three entries. Jurors: T. Robert and John Pacini. Contact Kevin Myers, Muddy’s Studio, Myers Gallery, 2610 S. Halladay St., Santa Ana, CA 92705; muddysstudio@att.net; www.muddysstudio.com; 714-641-4077. Montana, Helena “Beyond the Brickyard: 2nd Annual International Juried Exhibition” (January 30–March 14, 2010). Juried from digital. Fee: $35. Juror: Wayne Higby. Contact Steven Young Lee, Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts, 2915 Country Club Ave., Helena, MT 59602; archiebray@archiebray.org; www.archiebray.org; 406-443-3502. Submit online at www.ceramicsmonthly.org September 17, 2009 entry deadline Pennsylvania, Wayne “Craft Forms 2009” (December 4–January 23, 2010). Juried from digital. Fee: $40. Juror: Bruce W. Pepich. Contact Nancy Campbell, Wayne Art Center, 413 Maplewood Avenue, Wayne, PA 19073; info@wayneart.org; www.wayneart.org; 610-688-3553. September 26, 2009 entry deadline England, London “Proverbial Porcelain: Zelli Porcelain Award 2009” (October 19–31, 2009) open to artists working with porcelain and pieces under 40 cm. Juried from digital or slides. Fee: $15. Contact Zelli Porcelain, 55/57 Chiltern St., London, W1U 6ND England; info@zelli.co.uk; www.zelli.co.uk; 020 7224 2114. September 27, 2009 entry deadline District of Columbia, Washington “The 28th Annual Smithsonian Craft Show 2010” (April 21–25, 2010). Fee: $50. Contact Smithsonian Women’s Committee, MRC 037, PO Box 37012, Washington, DC 200137012; austrpr@si.edu; www.smithsoniancraftshow.org; 202-633-5069. October 1, 2009 entry deadline Louisiana, New Orleans “Curate This! 2009” (November 21–December 27, 2009). Contact BECA Gallery, 527 Saint Joseph St., New Orleans, LA 70130; becagallery@gmail.com; www.becagallery.com; 504566-8999. New Jersey, Summit “24th International Juried Show” (January 15–March 19, 2010). Juried from slides. Fee: $35. Juror: Susan Kismaric. Contact Jennifer Ayres, The Visual Arts Center of New Jersey, 68 Elm St., Summit, NJ 07901; jayres@artcenternj.org; http://artcenternj.org/files/juryshow10.pdf; 908-273-1457. October 5, 2009 entry deadline Virginia, Alexandria “Pandora’s Box” (December 10–January 10, 2010) open to work under 12x12x12 inches. Contact Target Gallery at The Torpedo Factory, 105 N. Union St., Alexandria, VA 22314; tfaa@torpedofactory.org; www.torpedofactory.org; 301-772-9340. October 15, 2009 entry deadline California, Laguna Beach “International Symposium: Paperclay Today” (February 4–7, 2010) open to artists working in paperclay. Juried from digital. Jurors: Rosette Gault and Graham Hay. Contact Linda Saville, Laguna Beach Ceramics, 31071 Monterey St., Laguna Beach, CA 92651; linda@lagunabeachceramics.com; www.lagunabeachceramics.com; 949-499-7446. November 1, 2009 entry deadline Massachusetts, North Adams “Call for exhibition proposals for 2009–2010 exhibition schedule.” Contact Contemporary Arts Center, 189 Beaver St., North Adams, MA 01247; info@thecac.org; www.thecac.org; 413-663-9555. November 30, 2009 entry deadline Dominican Republic, Santiago “Fourth International Ceramic Tile Triennial” (April 15–June 15, 2010) open to 15x15x5 cm tiles. Juried from digital. Contact Thimo Pimentel, Igneri Foundation, 1733 NW 79th Ave., Doral, FL 33126-1110; thimop@elit-tile.net; www.elit-tile.net; 809-531-0164. December 11, 2009 entry deadline California, Mission Viejo “Small Fish, Large Pot IV: 4th International Small Teapot Show and Competition” (February 11–March 11, 2010) open to small teapots. Juried from actual work. Fee: $40 for three entries. Juror: Guanzhen Zhou. Contact Tony Huntley, Saddleback College, 28000 Marguerite Pkwy., Mission Viejo, CA 92692; thuntley@saddleback.edu; http://gallery.saddleback.edu; 949-582-4401. united states exhibitions September 1, 2009 entry deadline North Carolina, Fayetteville “15th Annual Nellie Allen Smith Pottery Competition” (October 23–November 23, 2009). Juried from digital. Fee: $30 for two entries. Juror: Rick Berman. Contact Chris Kastner, Cape Fear Studios, 148 Maxwell St., Fayetteville, NC 28301; capefearstudios@yahoo.com; www.capefearstudios.com; 910-433-2986. September 4, 2009 entry deadline Minnesota, Bemidji “It’s Only Clay 2009” (November 6–December 19, 2009). Fee: $30 for three entires. Contact Bemidji Community Art Center, 426 Bemidji Ave., Bemidji, MN 56601; bcac@paulbunyan.net; http://bcac.wordpress.com; 218-444-7570. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 58 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 59 call for entries September 11, 2009 entry deadline Texas, Denton “23rd Annual National Juried Exhibition, Materials: Hard & Soft” (February 5–April 1, 2010). Fee: $30 for three entries. Juror: Jo Lauria. Contact Greater Denton Arts Council, 400 E. Hickory St., Denton, TX 76201; assocdir@dentonarts.com; www.dentonarts.com; 940-382-2787. September 15, 2009 entry deadline Texas, Houston “Illuminations: The Art of Light” (November 1–30, 2009). Juried from digital. Fee: $25 for three entries. Contact Karen Cruce, 18 Hands Gallery, 249 W 19th Street, Ste. B, Houston, TX 77008; info@18handsgallery.com; www.18handsgallery.com; 713-869-3099. September 18, 2009 entry deadline Colorado, Denver “Sole Purpose Two” (November 6–December 23) open to footwear inspired work. Juried from digital. Fee: $35 for three entries. Jurors: Marie Gibbons, Angela Lujan and Jimmy Sellars. Contact Marie Gibbons, Sellars Project Space & Evb Studio, 4343 W. 44th Ave., Denver, CO 80212; marie@mariegibbons.com; www.evbstudio.com; 720-234-7337. October 1, 2009 entry deadline Pennsylvania, Philadelphia “2010 National Student Juried Exhibition” (March 25–April 14, 2010) open to full-time undergraduate and graduate students. Jurors: Erin Furimsky and Matt Long. Contact Linda Ganstrom, NCECA, 77 Erie Village Square, Erie, CO 80516-6996; office@NCECA.net; www.nceca.net; 866-266-2322. October 26, 2009 entry deadline Louisiana, Baton Rouge “Eight Fluid Ounces 2010” (February 20–March 21, 2010) open to drinking vessels not exceeding 10”x10”x10.” Juried from digital or slides. Fee: $15. Contact Malia Krolak, Louisiana State University School of Art, 100 Lafayette St., Baton Rouge, LA 70801; kkrolak@lsu.edu; 225-389-7180. Alaska, Anchorage “No Big Heads: 24th Annual Juried Self Portrait Competition” (October 29–November 12, 2009). Juried from actual work. Fee: $14 for two entries. Juror: Frank Herrmann. Contact Brandon Moore, Student Union Gallery, University of Alaska at Anchorage, 3211 Providence Dr., Anchorage, AK 99508; gallery@uaa.alaska.edu; www.uaa.alaska.edu/studentlifeandleadership/activities/ gallery.cfm; 907-786-1783. November 12, 2009 entry deadline Texas, Beaumont “48th BAL National” (March 1–31, 2010). Fee: $35. Juror: Fealing Lin. Contact Dana Dorman, Beaumont Art League, 2675 Gulf St., Beaumont, TX 77703; bal-dana@gtbizclass.com; www.beaumontartleague.org; 409-833-4179. January 18, 2010 entry deadline Colorado, Grand Junction “3rd Biennial Contemporary Clay 2010” (May 14–June 26, 2010). Juried from digital or slides. Fee: $30 for three entries. Juror: Pete Pinnell. Contact Cheryl McNab, The Art Center, 1803 N. 7th St., Grand Junction, CO 81501; csilverman@gjartcenter.org; www.gjartcenter.org; 970-243-7337. regional exhibitions September 19, 2009 entry deadline California, Grass Valley “26th Annual Juried Northern Mines Art Exhibition” (November 2–29, 2009). Juried from digital. Contact Pioneer Arts Inc., PO Box 674, Grass Valley, CA 95945; www.pioneerart.com. September 25, 2009 entry deadline Ohio, Dayton “HWD 2009: A Regional Sculptural Competition” (November 9–December 11, 2009) open to IN, KY, MI and OH artists. Juried from digital or slides. Fee: $20 for three entries. Contact Amy Anderson, Coordinator, Rosewood Gallery, Rosewood Arts Centre, 2655 Olson Dr., Dayton, OH 45420; amy.anderson@ketteringoh.org; www.ketteringoh.org; 937-296-0294. September 26, 2009 entry deadline Rhode Island, Newport “The State of Clay” (October 8–November 5, 2009) open to CT, MA, and RI artists. Juried from actual work. Fee: $45 for three entries. Juror: Ellen Huie. Contact Christine Bevilacqua, Newport Potters Guild, 302 Thames St., Newport, RI 02840; info@newportpottersguild.com; www.newportpottersguild.com; 401-619-4880. October 30, 2009 entry deadline California, Laguna Beach “Paperclay Today: Student Art Exhibit” (February 2–4, 2010) open to works in paperclay made by undergraduate and graduate students in AZ, CA, NV, OR and WA. Juried from digital. Fee: $50 for five entries. Jurors: Rosette Gault and Graham Hay. Contact Linda Saville, Laguna Beach Ceramics, 31071 Monterey St., Laguna Beach, CA 92651; linda@lagunabeachceramics.com; www.lagunabeachceramics.com; 949-499-7446. Ohio, Athens “OH+5: Ohio Border Biennial 2010” (January 15–March 28, 2010) open to IN, KY, MI, OH, PA and WV artists. Juried from digital. Fee: $35. Jurors: Brian Harper, Dennis Harrington and Simone Osthoff. Contact Jill Smalley, The Dairy Barn Arts Center, Box 747, Athens, OH 45701; artsinfo@dairybarn.org; www.dairybarn.org; 740-592-4981. fairs, festivals, and sales September 25, 2009 entry deadline Arizona, Scottsdale “Scottsdale Art Show at WestWorld” (November 7–8, 2009). Contact Kara Stephens, AZ Big Media, 3101 N. Central Ave., Ste. 1070, Phoenix, AZ 85012; kstephens@azbusinessmagazine.com; www.azbigmedia.com; 602-424-8837. Massachusetts, Boston “CraftBoston” (April 9–11, 2010). Fee: $40. Contact CraftBoston, 175 Newbury St., Boston, MA 02116; show@craftboston.org; www.craftboston.org; 617-266-1810. Massachusetts, Boston “CraftBoston Holiday” (December 10–12, 2010). Contact CraftBoston, 175 Newbury St., Boston, MA 02116; show@craftboston.org; www.craftboston.org; 617-266-1810. October 22, 2009 entry deadline South Carolina, Greenville “Artisphere 2010 Festival” (May 7–9, 2010). Juried from digital. Fee: $30. Contact Liz Rundorff, Artisphere, 16 Augusta St., Greenville, SC 29601; liz@greenvillearts.com; www.artisphere.us; 864-271-9355. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 60 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 61 new books Vessel | Sculpture German and International Ceramics Since 1946. Edited by Olaf Thormann The title of this book, Vessel and Sculpture refers to the direction studio pottery has taken since the mid-20th century, developing from primarily functional vessels to artistically designed vessels, ceramic sculpture, installation, and conceptual art. The book accompanied an exhibition of the same name at the GRASSI Museum for Applied Art in Leipzig, Germany, which featured works by 288 artists and workshops from 27 countries. The works included in the exhibition and reproduced in mainly full page images in the book, consist largely of the museum’s current collection plus a few loaned pieces and future bequests from private collections, and, along with the text, focus on the evolution of studio ceramics from the mid-20th century to today. In his introduction, the book’s editor, Olaf Thormann describes that “The aim is to . . . trace the history of how ceramics has evolved. What is clearly shown is how ceramics developed . . . into an autonomous art medium, which is continually self-renewing. The idea behind this book is to convey something of the enthusiasm associated with that process.” Although artists from many countries are represented, as the focus of the exhibition and publication begins in 1946 when Germany was divided into East and West after the World War II, works by artists in the former German Democratic Republic (GDR) are prominently featured. Through the inclusion of typically underrepresented artists from the former GDR, the similarities and the sometimes divergent directions taken by artists who were working in East and West Germany are also presented. The influences and trends that emerge from the exchange of ideas between artists in different cultures is also addressed through the illustrations of works by artists in other countries in Europe and Asia as well as North and Central America, and Australia. In addition to the editor’s introductory essay, texts by some of the contributing collectors give interesting insights into their philosophies and interests in collecting, their enthusiasm, and their interest in sharing the works with a wider audience. 504 pages, 561 color illustrations. Hardcover, $85. ISBN 978-3-89790-288-6. Published by Arnoldsche Art Publishers, GMBH, Liststrasse 9, D-70180, Stuttgart, Germany; www.arnoldsche.com; art@arnoldsche.com. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 62 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 63 calendar Conferences, Exhibitions, Workshops, Fairs conferences California, Laguna Beach January 31 to February 4, 2010 “Paperclay Today,” with Rosette Gault and Graham Hay. Contact Linda Saville, Laguna Beach Ceramics, 31071 Monterey St., Laguna Beach, CA 92651; linda@lagunabeachceramics.com; www.lagunabeachceramics.com; 949-499-7446. Florida, Pensacola February 11 to February 13, 2010 “Gulf Coast Clay Conference and Woodstoke Festival,” with Patrick Bodine, John Britt, Bill Clover, Steve Dark, Jason Stokes, Anne Halley Webb. Fee: $95. Contact Gulf Coast Kiln Walk, Inc., 7507 Buckeye Dr., Navarre, FL 32566; zehrs@bellsouth.net; www.gulfcoastkilnwalk.org; 850-939-7972. Minnesota, Minneapolis October 15 to October 17 “The American Craft Council 2009 Conference: Creating a New Craft Culture.” Fee: $350. Contact American Craft Council, 72 Spring St., New York, NY 10012; www.craftcouncil.org/conference09. Nebraska, Lincoln October 1 to October 2 “Art of Fine Craft 2009: [kuh-nek-tiv],” with Jason Briggs, Sonya Clark, Victoria Goro-Rapoport, Jess Starkel. Fee: $120. Contact Lux Center for the Arts, 2601 N. 48th St., Lincoln, NE 68504; info@luxcenter.org; www.luxcenter.org; 402-466-8692. Pennsylvania, Philadelphia September 17 to September 19 “Handbuilt,” with guest speaker: William Daley. Demonstrators: Hayne Bayless, Lisa Naples, Sandi Pierantozzi, Holly Walker. Contact Sandi Pierantozzi, 2034 Fairmount Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19130; pots@sandiandneil.com; www.sandiandneil.com; 215-236-1617. Virginia, Front Royal October 1 to October 4 “8th Biennial Mid-Atlantic Clay Conference,” with Frank Giorgini, Suze Lindsay, Gay Smith. Fee: $390. Contact submit listings at www.ceramicsmonthly.org The Clay Connection, PO Box 3214, Merrifield, VA 22116-3214; conference@theclayconnection.org; www.theclayconnection.org; 540-636-6016. Denmark, Skælskør November 3 to December 16 or January 5 to February 17, 2010 “Network 2009: Symposium.” Contact Ane Fabricius Christiansen, Guldagergaard International Ceramic Research Center, Jernbanevej 14, st. tv., Skælskør, 4230 Denmark; ceramic@ceramic.dk; www.ceramic.dk; 45 5819 0016. Germany, Bröllin September 3 to September 5, 2010 “1st European Woodfire Conference.” Contact Markus Böhm, First European Woodfire Conference, Alt Gaarz 6, Lärz, D-17248 Germany; markus@woodfire.net; www.woodfire.net. Republic of Korea, Heungdeok-Gu, Cheongju-Si September 23 to November 1 “Cheongju International Craft Biennale 2009.” Contact Kang Sun Kyoung, Cheongju International Craft Biennial, 329 Heungdeok-Ro, Heungdeok-Gu, Cheongju-Si, 361-828 Republic of Korea; cjcraft@korea.com; www.okcj.org; 82 43 277 2501 3. South Africa, Durban September 18 to September 27 “African Ceramics Conference.” Contact University of KwaZulu-Natal, King George V Ave., Durban, South Africa; armstrongj@ukzn.ac.za; www.ukzn.ac.za; 27 0 31 260 2212. solo exhibitions Arizona, Scottsdale October 15 to October 22 “Precision,” works by Nathan Youngblood; at King Galleries of Scottsdale, 7100 Main St., #1. California, Pomona September 12 to November 28 “New Work,” works by Harrison McIntosh; at American Museum of Ceramic Art, 340 S. Garey Ave. California, San Francisco through September 13 “Legacy of an American Potter,” works by Warren MacKenzie; at Museum of Craft and Folk Art, 51 Yerba Buena Ln. Colorado, Denver October 2 to October 31 “Ceramic Constructions,” works by Russel Wrankle; at Plinth Gallery/ Ceramic Design, 3520 Brighton Blvd. Idaho, Boise through September 8 “Pure Form,” works by Kerry Moosman; at Stewart Gallery, 1110 W. Jefferson St. Illinois, Chicago September 11 to November 7 “Skin,” works by Thomas Schmidt; at Dubhe Carreño Gallery, 118 N. Peoria St., 2nd Fl. Iowa, Iowa City through September 18 “Recent Ceramics,” works by Jill Lawley. through September 18 “Recent Ceramics,” works by John Neely. September 25 to October 15 “Featured Artist,” works by John Glick; at AKAR, 257 E. Iowa Ave. Massachusetts, Pittsfield through September 12 “Human Made Wild”; through September 12 “Battle of the Britches,” works by Chris Antemann; at Ferrin Gallery, 433 N. St. Minnesota, Minneapolis through November 1 “We Believe in Some Thing,” works by Roxanne Jackson; at Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 2400 Third Avenue S. Montana, Red Lodge September 1 to September 30 “Featured Artist,” works by Sam Chung; at Red Lodge Clay Center, 123 S. Broadway. New Jersey, Surf City through September 9 “Recent Work,” works by Neil Patterson; at m. t. burton gallery, 1819 N. Long Beach Blvd. New Mexico, Albuquerque September 4 to September 30 “Dire-Rama Wildlife on the Ledge,” works by Julianne Harvey; at Mariposa Gallery, 3500 Central Ave., SE. New York, New York October 22 to November 19 “Traffic Patterns,” works by Kathy Erteman; at Greenwich House Pottery, 16 Jones St. New York, Port Chester September 3 to September 26 “Containers for the Intangible,” works by Bryan Hopkins; at Clay Art Center, 40 Beech St. North Carolina, Bakersville September 5 to October 31 “Collecting, Creating, Connecting,” works by Liz Zlot Summerfield; at Crimson Laurel Gallery, 23 Crimson Laurel Way. Ohio, Canton through November 1 “Remonstrations from the Iconic Rustbelt,” works by William Brouillard; at Canton Museum of Art, 1001 Market Ave., N. Ohio, Columbus through September 30 “New Work,” works by Scott Dooley; October 16 to November 15 “New Work,” works by Chris Gustin; at Sherrie Gallerie, 694 N. High St. Ohio, Rocky River September 12 to October 5 “New Work,” works by Mark Yasenchack; at River Gallery, 19046 Old Detroit Rd. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 64 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 65 calendar solo exhibitions Oregon, Portland September 3 to September 24 “Mythscapes and Music,” works by George Johanson; at Oregon College of Art and Craft, 8245 S.W. Barnes Rd. Pennsylvania, Scranton September 10 to October 18 “Clay and Light,” works by Jordan Taylor; at Mahady Gallery, Marywood University Art Galleries, 2300 Adams Ave. Tennessee, Smithville through September 15 “Meditations on Space,” works by Sally Brogden; at Appalachian Center for Craft, 1560 Craft Center Dr. Vermont, Bennington through September 19 “New Work,” works by Diane Sullivan. September 12 to November 8 “Revisiting Traditions: Illuminating Our Times,” works by Emmett Leader; at The Bennington Museum, 75 W. Main St. (Rte. 9). Washington, Bellevue October 10 to January 31, 2010 “Bright Abyss,” works by Robert Sperry; at Bellevue Arts Museum, 510 Bellevue Way NE. Wisconsin, Racine September 20 to January 17, 2010 “Collection Focus,” works by Michael Lucero; at Racine Art Museum, 441 Main St. Canada, Ottawa September 24 to October 14 “New Work,” works by Sunmi Jung; at Lafrenière & Pai Gallery, 13 Murray St. Canada, Toronto through December 31 “Porcelain Umbrella Wall Installation,” works by Ann Mortimer; September 10 to January 10, 2010 “Bigger, Better, More: The Art of Viola Frey”; at Gardiner Museum, 111 Queen’s Park. England, London October 7 to October 30 “Camp d’urnes,” works by Claudi Casanovas; at Galerie Besson, 15 Royal Arcade, 28 Old Bond St. England, Eton September 1 to September 30 “New Work,” works by Laurance Simon; at JaM Eton, 81 High St. England, Liverpool October 3 to November 28 “The Elisabeth Zuckerman Memorial Exhibition,” works by Magdalene Odundo; at Bluecoat Display Centre, 50-51 The Bluecoat, Bluecoat Chambers, College Ln. Germany, Berlin October 1 to October 31 “Einzelstücke”; at Galerie Theis-Keramik, Schustehrusstr. 15. Italy, Livorno through October 30 “Art in the Garden,” works by Riccardo Biavati; at Hotel Cernia, Via San Gaetano, 23. Netherlands, Delft September 19 to October 17 “New Work,” works by Pauline Wiertz. October 24 to November 21 “New Work,” works by Catrin Howell; at Gallery Terra Delft, Nieuwstraat 7. Netherlands, Leeuwarden through September 6 “Levenswerk 07 - Fussfassen,” works by Beate Reinheimer. through November 8 “Killing Treasures,” works by Anamá Ponce Vazquez; at Ceramic Museum Princessehof, Grote Kerkstraat 11. Netherlands, ‘s-Hertogenbosch throughSeptember 6 “Beyond Baroque,” works by Nadia Naveau; at Sm’s – Stedelijk Museum’s-Hertogenbosch, Magistratenlaan 100. Spain, Barcelona through September 20 “Ceràmica: Obra Recent,” works by Anima Roos; at Museu de Cántir D’Argentona, Plaça de l’Església 9. Switzerland, Carouge September 19 to October 4 “New Work,” works by Gisèle Buthod-Garçon; at Atelier Anne-Claude Virchaux, Rue Saint Joseph 13. “New Work,” works by Marc Leuthold; at Atelier Galerie Maya Guidi, Rue Saint Joseph 40. “New Work,” works by Maude Schneider; at Atelier Galerie Tiramisú, Avenue Cardinal Mermillod 18. “New Work,” works by Ueli Schmutz; at Atelier Maison Potter, Ch. de Pinchat 22bis. “New Work,” works by Tjok Dessauvage; at Atelier Michelle Dethurens, Rue de Cardinal Mermillod 18. “New Work,” works by Adriana Hartley; at Atelier Mireille Donzé/Djeihne, Rue Saint Joseph 31. “New Work,” works by Halima Cassell; at Atelier Orange, Rue Saint Joseph 10. “New Work,” works by Danielle Lescot; at Atelier Renée Duc, Place du Marché 15. “New Work,” works by Christine Aschwanden; at Collectif C’BOs, Rue Saint Joseph 7. “New Work,” works by Ursula Commandeur; at Galerie Annick Zufferey, Place des Charmettes 1. “New Work,” works by Margareta Daepp; at Galerie Lignetreize, Rue Ancienne 15. “New Work,” works by Marie-Noëlle Leppens; at Galerie Marianne Brand, Rue Ancienne 20. “New Work,” works by Madola; at Galerie SMA, Rue du Marché 12. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 66 calendar solo exhibitions “New Work,” works by Christian Germann; at Gilbert Crugnola, Rue Ancienne 27. “New Work,” works by Agnès Debizet; at Jardin du Musée de Carouge, Place de Sardaigne 2. “New Work,” works by Sangwoo Kim; at Peter Kammermann, Décorateur, Rue Saint Victor 21. Switzerland, Geneva through January 11, 2010 “ PT Projects,” works by Philippe Barde; at Musée Ariana, Ave. de la Paix 10. Switzerland, Grand Lancy September 19 to October 4 “New Work,” works by Yoshimi Futamura; at Galerie de la Ferme de la Chapelle, Route de la Chapelle 39. group exhibitions Arizona, Scottsdale September 17 to September 24 “Surface,” works by Mark Tahbo, Dora Tse-Pe and Daryl Whitegeese; at King Galleries of Scottsdale, 7100 Main St., #1. California, Fresno September 3 to October 31 “Clay Mentors II,” works by Patsy Cox, Cameron Crawford, Tom Decker, Craig Easter, Susanne Kuebler French, Bob Kizziar, Garrett Masterson, Una Mjurka, and Monica Van den Dool; at Clay Mix, 1003 N. Abby St. California, Sacramento through October 18 “Soaring Voices: Contemporary Japanese Women Ceramic Artists”; at Crocker Art Museum, 216 O St. California, San Rafael October 16 to January 2, 2010 “Out of the Fire: Clay & Glass from ACGA”; at Falkirk Cultural Center, 1408 Mission Ave. District of Columbia, Washington through January 1, 2010 “Taking Shape: Ceramics in Southeast Asia”; at Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, 1050 Independence Ave. SW. District of Columbia, Washington throughSeptember 21 “The Welsh Table: An Exhibition of Contemporary Studio Ceramics”; at Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Dr. SW. Georgia, Augusta September 17 to October 15 “Making Faces: An Exhibition of Face Jugs”; at North Augusta Municipal Building, Georgia Ave. Georgia, Decatur throughSeptember 26 “Mug Shots,” works by Josh DeWeese, David Eichelberger, Debra Fritts, Julia Galloway, Chris Gustin, Kristen Kieffer, Kathy King, Shane Mickey, Sandi Pierantozzi, and Kevin Snipes; at MudFire Clayworks, 175 Laredo Drive. Georgia, Sautee Nacoochee September 1 to August 31, 2010 “International Folk Pottery Exhibition”; at Folk Pottery Museum of Northeast Georgia, Georgia Hwy 255, Sautee Nacoochee Center. Georgia, Watkinsville August 29 to September 16 “Perspectives 2009: Georgia Pottery Invitational”; at Oconee Cultural Arts Foundation, OCAF Art Center, 34 School St. Illinois, Chicago September 14 to October 11 “The 2nd Annual Lillstreet International”; September 14 to October 11 “Drink: Functional Forms for Every Libation”; at Lillstreet Art Center, 4401 N. Ravenswood Ave. Iowa, Iowa City September 25 to October 15 “Recent Ceramics,” works by Dan Anderson and Richard Notkin. October 16 to November 6 “Recent Ceramics,” works by Naomi Dalglish and Michael Hunt; at AKAR, 257 E. Iowa Ave. Maine, Deer Isle through October 4 “Summer of Love: Fall in Love with Something Beautiful”; at Dowstudio Showroom, 19 Dow Rd. Massachusetts, Brockton through January 3, 2010 “The Perfect Fit: Shoes Tell Stories”; at Fuller Craft Museum, 455 Oak St. Massachusetts, Northampton through September 20 “Looking Forward Looking Back: Japanese/American Ceramics,” works by Naoko Gomi, Ayumi Horie, Hiroshi Nakayama, Akira Satake, and Ikuzi Teraki; at The Artisan Gallery, 162 Main St. Minnesota, Minneapolis September 25 to November 8 “2009 Regis Masters,” works by Ron Meyers and Patti Warashina; at Northern Clay Center, 2424 Franklin Ave. E. Minnesota, Northfield September 18 to October 17 “In Between,” works by Kelly Connole and Beth Lo; at Carleton College Art Gallery, 1 N. College St. Montana, Helena through September 6 “Farewell Exhibition for Archie Bray Resident Artists,” works by Renee Audette, Anne Drew Potter, and Brian Rochefort; through September 19 “Archie Bray Foundation’s 2009 Fellowship Artists Exhibition,” works by Birdie Boone, Nathan Craven, Donna Flanery, David Peters, and Kevin Ceramics Monthly September 2009 67 calendar group exhibitions Snipes; at Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts, 2915 Country Club Ave. Montana, Whitefish September 3 to September 27 “White Clay - Red Clay,” works by George McCauley and Sarah Yeager; at Whitefish Gallery/Stillwater Gallery, 240 Central Ave. New Mexico, Santa Fe through September 12 “Gallery All Stars”; at Santa Fe Clay, 1615 Paseo de Peralta. New York, New York September 10 to October 8 “New Amsterdam at 400: Celebration of Dutch Ceramics”; September 10 to October 8 “Who Lives in Greenwich Village?” works by Andy Brayman and Ayumi Horie; at Greenwich House Pottery, 16 Jones St. Ohio, Rocky River through September 10 “New Works,” works by Bill Brouillard, Lynne Lofton, and Ron Meyers; at River Gallery, 19046 Old Detroit Rd. Pennsylvania, Lancaster September 26 to October 25 “17th Annual Strictly Functional Pottery National”; at Kevin Lehman’s Pottery, 560 S. Prince St. Rhode Island, Newport October 8 to November 5 “The State of Clay”; at Newport Potters Guild, 302 Thames St. Virginia, Alexandria through September 20 “Education Show: Potters’ Vocabulary 101”; October 26 to November 29 “Table Talk”; at Scope Gallery at The Torpedo Factory, 105 N. Union St. Virginia, Alexandria September 21 to October 25 “Repetition in Clay”; at Scope Gallery at The Torpedo Factory, 105 N. Union St. Virginia, Williamsburg through December 31 “Inspiration and Ingenuity: American Stoneware”; at Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum, 325 W. Francis St. Virginia, Williamsburg through January 2, 2011 “Pottery with a Past: Stoneware in Early America”; at DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum, 325 W. Francis St. Washington, Tacoma October 15 to November 20 “WAC 2009 Annual Show”; at Artstop Gallery, Washington Clay Arts Association, 940 Broadway. Belgium, Brussels September 12 to October 10 “New Work,” works by Eva Hild and Kjell Rylander; at Puls Contemporary Ceramics, Kasteleinsplein 4, Place du Châtelain. England, London September 30 to December 20 “Terra Incognita: Italy’s Ceramics Revival”; at Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art, 39A Canonbury Sq. England, London through September 2 “Summer Exhibition,” works by Richard Batterham, Anne Currier, Deirdre Hawthorne, Janet Leach, Jim Malone, Priscilla Mouritzen, Daniel Smith, and Masamichi Yoshikawa; September 9 to September 30 “Ceramics from Finland,” works by Kirsi Kivivirta, Pekka Paikkari, Kristina Riska and Kati Tuominen-Niittylä; at Galerie Besson, 15 Royal Arcade, 28 Old Bond St. England, London through October 11 “French Porcelain for English Palaces: Sèvres from the Royal Collection”; at The Queen’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace. England, London September 1 to March 1, 2010 “Objects of Luxury: French Porcelain of the Eighteenth Century”; at Victoria & Albert Museum, Cromwell Rd. England, Eton September 19 to October 11 “A Retrospective View 1984–2009,” works by Gordon Baldwin and Nancy Baldwin; at JaM Eton and Eton College, The Art Schools, Eton College, Common Lane. France, Limoges through October 24 “Made in France by Americans,” works by Daphne Corregan, Wayne Fischer, Jeffrey Haines, Jonathan Hammer, Patrick Loughran, Kristin McKirdy, Luisa Maisel and Wade Saunders; at La Foundation D’entreprise Bernardaud, 27, Avenue Albert Thomas. France, Treigny through September 30 “1001 Bouteilles à travers le vignoble de Sancerre”; at APCP, L’Association des Potiers Createurs de Puisaye, Le Couvent. Germany, Berlin through October 26 “Ceramics from Westerwald”; through November 16 “Karl Scheid and Gerald Weigel”; at Keramik-Museum Berlin, Schustehrusstr. 13. Germany, Frechen through November 22 “Works by the London Group”; September 20 to November 22 “Frechener Keramikpreis”; at Keramion Foundation, Bonnstraße 12. Netherlands, Deventer September 6 to October 3 “New Work,” works by François Debien and Catherine Salmon; at Loes & Reinier International Ceramics, Korte Assenstraat 15. Netherlands, Tegelen through September 6 “Pot, Potter, Pots!”; at Keramiekcentrum Tiendschuur Tegelen, Kasteellaan 8. Republic of Korea, Heungdeok-Gu, Cheongju-Si September 23 to November 1 “Cheongju International Craft Biennale 2009: Outside the Box”; at Cheongju International Craft Biennial, 329 Heungdeok-Ro. Spain, Barcelona October 1 to January 30, 2010 “Elegance and Minimalism: Imperial Chinese Porcelain from the Baur Collection”; at Museu de Ceràmica, Palau Reial de Pedralbes, Av Diagonal 686. Switzerland, Carouge September 19 to October 4 “Swiss Ceramics 1959–2009: Large Size Ceramics”; at Bruckner Foundation, 17-19 av. Cardinal Mermillod. Switzerland, Carouge September 12 to October 3 “New Work,” works by Peter Fink and Christiane Murner; at L’Antre Peaux, 43 Rue Ancienne. Switzerland, Geneva September 4 to October 18 “World Scenes: Ten Years of Travels in China”; at Foundadtion Baur, Musée des Arts d’Extrême Orient, 8 Rue Munier Romilly. Switzerland, Geneva through October 4 “Swiss Ceramics 1959–2009: La Jeune Génération,” works by Perrine Durgnat, Maurizio Ferrari, Laure Gonthier, Maude Schneider, Simone Stocker, Marianne Eggimann, and Ursula Vogel; at Musée Ariana, Ave. de la Paix 10. Switzerland, Zürich through October 25 “Porcelain: White Gold”; at Museum Bellerive, Höschgasse 3. multimedia exhibitions California, San Diego through January 10, 2010 “Masters of Mid-Century California Modernism,” including ceramic works by Evelyn Ackerman and Jerome Ackerman; at Mingei International Museum, Balboa Park, 1439 El Prado. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 68 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 69 calendar multimedia exhibitions California, Venice through September 19 “Rogue Wave ‘09,” including ceramic works by Tia Pulitzer and Matt Wedel; at LA Louver, 45 N. Venice Blvd. District of Columbia, Washington through October 12 “Flora: Growing Inspirations,” including ceramic works by John Thigpen; at US Botanic Garden, 245 First St., SW. District of Columbia, Washington through September 16 “Milgrom on Morandi: Ceramics and Paintings,” including ceramic works by Lillianne Milgrom; at cross mackenzie ceramic arts, 1054 31st St. District of Columbia, Washington through January 3, 2010 “Renwick Craft Invitational 2009”; at Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Pennsylvania Ave. at 17 St., NW. Kansas, Wichita September 4 to October 18 “Wichita National All Media Craft Exhibition 2009”; at The Wichita Center for the Arts, 9112 E. Central. Maryland, Baltimore through September 26 “More than Skin Deep”; at Baltimore Clayworks, 5706 Smith Ave. Massachusetts, Pittsfield throughSeptember 5 “Teapots: Interpretations”; at Ferrin Gallery, 433 N. St. New York, New York through September 19 “Northern (Latitudes: Contemporary Norwegian and American Art”; at Scandinavia House, 58 Park Ave. at 38th St. Ohio, Rocky River October 10 to November 7 “New Work,” including ceramic works by Stephanie Craig and Todd Leech; at River Gallery, 19046 Old Detroit Rd. Oregon, Portland through September 22 “Craft Biennial: A Review of Northwest Art and Craft”. October 1 to October 25 “OCAC Artist-In-Residence Exhibition”; at Oregon College of Art and Craft, 8245 SW Barnes Rd. Pennsylvania, Philadelphia through October 18 “The Art of Japanese Craft: 1875 to the Present”; at Philadelphia Museum of Art, 26th St. and the Benjamin Franklin Pkwy. Pennsylvania, Philadelphia September 4 to October 31 “The Self and Beyond,” including ceramic works by Dana Major Kanovitz; at Wexler Gallery, 201 N. Third St. Washington, Bellevue through October 18 “ÜberPortrait,” including works by Kukuli Velarde and Ah Xian. through January 3, 2010 “The Self Transparent,” including ceramic works by Judy Hill; at Bellevue Arts Museum, 510 Bellevue Way NE. Wisconsin, Racine through January 17, 2010 “New and Novel 2009: Recent Gifts to RAM’s Collection”; at Racine Art Museum, 441 Main St. England, London September 25 to November 21 “The Birthday Party,” including ceramic works by Mia E. Göransson, Kate Malone, Hylton Nel, and Jacob van den Breughel; at Flow Gallery, 1-5 Needham Rd. England, London through September 20 “Beyond Bloomsbury: Designs of the Omega Workshop 1913– 1919”; at The Courtauld Gallery, The Courtauld Institute of Art, Sommerset House, Strand. England, Bovey Tracey through September 13 “Summer Exhibition”; September 26 to November 8 “In Tandem,” including ceramic works by Blandine Anderson; at Devon Guild of Craftsmen, Riverside Mill. Netherlands, Amsterdam September 12 to October 10 “Ceramics and Glass,” including ceramic works by Barbara Nanning; at Galerie Carla Koch, Veemkade 500. The Netherlands, Amsterdam through January 31, 2010 “At the Russian Court: Palace and Protocol in the 19th Century”; at Hermitage Amsterdam, Amstel 51. fairs, festivals, and sales Connecticut, Westport November 21 to November 22 “Craft Westport 2009”; at Staples High School, N Ave. Florida, St. Petersburg September 12 “5th Annual Pot Roast & Pottery Raffle for CERF”. October 11 “Clay Games III: The Olympiad for Clay Artists”; at Craftsman House Gallery, 2955 Central Ave. Maryland, Baltimore September 25 “The Clay Ball: Celebrating the Community of Wood-Firing”; at The Engineer’s Club, 11 W Mount Vernon Pl. Minnesota, Minneapolis September 10 to September 13 “American Pottery Festival”; at Northern Clay Center, 2424 Franklin Ave. E. New Jersey, Montclair October 17 to October 18 “Fall Brookdale Park Fine Art and Crafts Show”; at Brookdale Park, Watchung Ave. New Jersey, Upper Montclair September 12 to September 13 “Fine Art and Crafts at Anderson Park”; at Anderson Park, 274 Bellevue Ave. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 70 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 71 calendar fairs, festivals, and sales New York, Stone Ridge October 10 to October 11 “Open Studio Exhibition”; at Stone Ridge Studio, 149 Vly Atwood Rd. New York, White Plains October 16 to October 18 “16th Annual Westchester Craft Show”; at The Westchester County Center, Bronx River Pkwy. North Carolina, Charlotte October 3 “Circle of Eight Fall Sale”; at Circle of Eight, 1025 Dade St. Ohio, Berea September 13 “Berea Arts Fest”; at Berea Arts Fest, Inc., 31 East Bridge St., Ste. 202. Oregon, Eugene October 9 to October 11 “Clay Fest 2009”; at Lane Events Center, 796 W. 13th Ave. Pennsylvania, Lancaster September 4 to September 7 “Long’s Park Art and Craft Festival”; at Long’s Park, 1441 Harrisburg Pike. Texas, New Braunfels October 24 to October 25 “Texas Clay Festival”; at Buck Pottery, 1296 Gruene Rd. Virginia, Arlington October 17 to October 18 “6th Light in October Fine Art Sale”; at Historic Barcroft Community House, 800 S. Buchanan St. England, London October 8 to October 12 “Art London”; at Art London, Royal Hospital, Chelsea SW3. England, London October 6 to October 18 “Origin: The London Craft Fair at Somerset House”; at Somerset House, Strand. workshops Arizona, Prescott October 2 to October 4 “Rio Rewards PMC Certification Class,” with Tonya Davidson. Fee: $425. Contact Karen vanPrice, vanPrice Fine Art, 2057 Heavenly Place, Prescott, AZ 86303; vanprice1@msn.com; www.vanprice.com; 928-443-9723. Arizona, Tuscon October 24 to October 25 “The Functional Pot: Tips, Tools and Techniques,” with Bill vanGilder. Fee: $130; $115, members. Contact Southern Arizona Clay Artists, PO Box 44218, Tuscon, AZ 85733; info@sa-clayartists.org; www.sa-clayartists.org; 520-615-9581. California, Berkeley September 19 “The Creative Extruder Workshop,” with Bill Shinn. Fee: $65. Contact Janie Rose, Berkeley Potters Guild, 731 Jones St., Berkeley, CA 94710; www.berkeleypotters.com; 510-524-7031. Colorado, Arvada September 5 to September 6 “Tradition and Innovation,” with Takashi Nakazato. Fee: $160. Contact Bebe Alexander, Arvada Center for Arts, 6901 Wadsworth Blvd., Arvada, CO 80003; bebe@arvadacenter.org; www.arvadacenter.org; 720-898-7239. Connecticut, Brookfield October 10 to October 11 “Slip Glazing,” with Sharon Pollock. Fee: $250. Contact Heather Laskowski, Brookfield Craft Center, PO Box 122, Brookfield, CT 06770; registrar@brookfieldcraftcenter.org; www.brookfieldcraftcenter.org; 203-775-4526. Connecticut, East Granby September 12 to September 13 “Altered Forms and Murals,” with Frank Matranga. Fee: $120. Contact Expressions Pottery, 9 School St., East Granby, CT 06026; hhpots@sbcglobal.com; www.expressionspottery.com; 860-844-0138. Georgia, Atlanta September 26 to September 27 “Demonstration/Lecture,” with Robert Boomer Moore. Fee: $110. Contact Glenn Dair, Callanwolde Fine Arts Center, 980 Briarcliff Rd. NE, Atlanta, GA 30306; gdair@callanwolde.org; www.callanwolde.org; 404-872-5338. Georgia, Augusta September 26 “Making Faces: A Workshop for Making Face Jugs.” Fee: $50. Contact Clay Artists of the Southeast (CASE), PO Box 1388, Evans, GA 30809; garydex@yahoo.com; 803-278-1335. Georgia, Decatur October 16 to October 18 “Image Transfer Techniques,” with Paul Wandless. Fee: $295; October 23 to October 25 “Achieving a Beautiful Macabre,” with Bonnie Seeman. Fee: $295; November 6 to November 8 “Sculpting Inside Out,” with Arthur Gonzalez. Fee: $295. Contact Luba Sharapan and Erik Haagensen, MudFire Clayworks & Gallery, 175 Laredo Dr., Decatur, GA 30030; info@mudfire.com; http://www.mudfire.com; 404-377-8033. Georgia, Watkinsville September 5 to September 6 “Tricks for Surface Decoration and the Intricacies of Glazing,” with Jennifer Graff and Katy McDougal. Fee: $125; one day, $65. Contact Cindy Farley, Oconee Cultural Arts Foundation, OCAF Art Center, PO Box 631, Watkinsville, GA 30677; info@ocaf.com; www.ocaf.com; 706-769-4565. Illinois, Sandwich September 4 to September 7 “Electric vs. Gas Firing Workshop.” Fee: $390; October 3 to October 11 “Journey Workshop.” Fee: $2130; Ceramics Monthly September 2009 72 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 73 calendar workshops November 12 to November 15 “Electric vs. Gas Firing Workshop.” Fee: $390. Contact Steven Hill and Kim Miner, Center Street Clay, 218 W. Center St., Sandwich, IL 60548; studio@centerstreetclay.com; www.centerstreetclay.com; 815-570-2030. Maryland, Arnold September 12 to September 13 “Clay Inlay and Monoprints,” with Mitch Lyons. Fee: $125 for both days. Contact Anne Webber, The Potters Guild of Annapolis, 452 Laurel Valley Ct., Arnold, MD 21012; pottersguildofannapolis@gmail.com; www.pottersguildofannapolis.com; 410-861-6295. Maryland, Frederick September 12 to September 13 “East Asian Coil Technique,” with Joyce Michaud. Fee: $175; September 19 to September 20 “Photographing Ceramics,” with Joyce Michaud. Fee: $175; October 8 to October 11 “Kiln Technology,” with Joyce Michaud. Fee: $300; October 24 to October 25 “Properties of Clay,” with Nancy Robbins. Fee: $175; October 30 to November 1 “Finding Ideas and Giving Them Life in Clay,” with Val Cushing. Fee: $195; November 5 to November 8 “Wood Firing,” with Joyce Michaud. Fee: $300; November 12 to November 15 “Properties of Glaze,” with Nancy Robbins. Fee: $300. Contact Joyce Michaud, Hood College Ceramics Program, 401 Rosemont Ave., Frederick, MD 21701; jmichaud@hood.edu; www.hood.edu/academic/art/hodson; 301-696-3526. Massachusetts, Chatham September 20 to September 21 “Altered Forms and Murals,” with Frank Matranga. Fee: $75 non-member 1 day; $120, 2 days. Contact Cape Cod Potters, Inc., Box 76, Chatham, MA 02633; sassybluepottery@hotmail.com; www.capecodpotters.org; www.capecodcreativearts.org; 508-255-1732. Massachusetts, Stockbridge September 26 to September 27 “Throwing Porcelain with Good Technique,” with Angela Fina. Fee: $250; October 10 “Demonstration and Discussion,” with Chris Gustin. Fee: $30. Contact Hope Sullivan, IS183 Art School, 13 Willard Hill Rd., PO Box 1400, Stockbridge, MA 01262; hope@is183.org; www.is183.org; 413-298-5252. Mississippi, Biloxi October 17 to October 18 “Lana Wilson Workshop.” Fee: $320. Contact Marjorie Gowdy, Executive Director, Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of Art, 1596 Glenn Swetman St., Biloxi, MS 39530; marjie@georgeohr.org; www.georgeohr.org; 228-374-5547. Mississippi, Ridgeland September 19 to September 20 “Vessels Form and Function Demonstration Workshop,” with Connor Burns. Fee: $125. Contact Craftsmen’s Guild of Mississippi, 950 Rice Rd., Ridgeland, MS 39157; www.mscrafts.org; 601-856-7546. New Jersey, Layton September 5 to September 7 “Fire Runs Rampant: Open Studio,” with Bruce Dehnert. Fee: $460. Contact Jennifer Brooks, Peters Valley Craft Center, 19 Kuhn Rd., Layton, NJ 07851; registrar@petersvalley.org; www.petersvalley.org; 973-948-5200. New Jersey, Metuchen September 14 to September 21 “Reconsidering Raku,” with Linda VonderschmidtLaStella. Fee: $60; September 15 to September 18 “Timeless Tiles,” with Linda Vonderschmidt-LaStella. Fee: $125; October 6 to October 9 “Timeless Tiles,” with Linda Vonderschmidt-LaStella. Fee: $125. Contact Linda Vonderschmidt-LaStella, Earthsongs Studio, 242 Amboy Ave., Metuchen, NJ 08840; claysongs@aol.com; www.claysongs.com; 732-906-4137. New Mexico, Abiquiu September 28 to October 4 “Micaceous Pottery and Fall Traditions of Northern New Mexico,” with Camilla Trujillo. Fee: $275. Contact Linda Seebantz, Ghost Ranch, HC77 Box 11, Abiquiu, NM 87510; barbaras@ghostranch.org; www.ghostranch.org; 505-685-4333. New York, New York October 17 to October 18 “Throw, Facet, Stretch, Dart!” with Neil Patterson. Fee: $225. Contact Kate Missett, Artworks/West Side YMCA, 5 W. 63rd St., New York, NY 10023; kmissett@ymcanyc.org; www.artworkswsy.com; 212-875-4129. New York, Port Chester September 12 to September 13 “Intimately Minimal: Function and Dysfunction in Clay,” with Bryan Hopkins. Fee: $200. Contact Leigh Taylor Mickelson, Clay Art Center, 40 Beech St., Port Chester, NY 10573; mail@clayartcenter.org; www.clayartcenter.org; 914-937-2047. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 74 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 75 calendar workshops Ceramics Monthly September 2009 76 Soldner Clay Mixers by Muddy Elbow Manufacturing 310 W. 4th Newton, KS • 67114 Phone/Fax (316) 281-9132 conrad@southwind.net soldnerequipment.com North Carolina, Brasstown September 6 to September 12 “Celtic Ceramics,” with Pamela KohlerCamp. Fee: $512; September 20 to September 26 “Clay: Something for Everyone,” with Judy Brater-Rose. Fee: $512; September 27 to October 2 “Wildlife Sculpture,” with Ira Chaffin. Fee: $460. Contact Sue Fruchey, John C. Campbell Folk School, One Folk School Rd., Brasstown, NC 28902; marketing@folkschool.org; www.folkschool.org; 828-837-2775. North Carolina, Charlotte November 21 “Handbuilding Workshop,” with Liz Zlot. Summerfield. Fee: $65. Contact Clayworks Studio and Gallery, 301 East 9th St., Ste. 150, Charlotte, NC 28202; adellinger@clayworksinc.org; www.clayworksinc.org; 704-344-0795. North Carolina, Highlands October 16 to October 17 “Introduction to Precious Metal Clay,” with Sara Sloan Stine. Fee: $195; members, $175; October 19 to October 31 “Spooky Raku,” with Patrick Taylor. Fee: $275; members, $250; November 2 to November 19 “Open Studio for Ceramics,” with Patrick Taylor. Fee: $375, members, $350; December 1 to December 18 “Open Studio for Ceramics,” with Patrick Taylor. Fee: $375, members, $350. Contact Linda Steigleder, The Bascom, PO Box 766, Highlands, NC 28741; info@thebascom.org; www.thebascom.org; 828-526-4949. North Carolina, Seagrove September 1 to September 30 “Stay and Study Where Over 100 Potteries Call Home,” with David Fernandez. Fee: $795. Contact Seagrove Stoneware Inn and Pottery, 136 W. Main St., Seagrove, NC 27341; artists@seagrovestoneware.com; www.seagrovestoneware.com; 336-873-8283. Oregon, Otis September 9 to September 11 “Ceramic Instrument Making/Singing Earth,” with Andrew Kail. Fee: $220. Contact Sitka Center for Art and Ecology, PO Box 65, Otis, OR 97368; info@sitkacenter.org; www.sitkacenter.org; 541-994-5485. Tennessee, Gatlinburg September 20 to September 26 “Multiple Vessels as a Pottery Image,” with Patrick Horsley; September 27 to October 3“Introduction to Wood Firing,” with Bill van Gilder; October 4 to October 10 “Teapot Form: Utilitarian vs. Diminutive,” with Fong Choo; October 16 to October 18 “Low Fire Clay Adventure,” with David Gamble; October 23 to October 25 “Personalized Pots: Surface, Form & Problem Solving,” with Julia Galloway. Contact Chuck McMahon, Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts, 556 Pkwy., Gatlinburg, TN 37738; info@arrowmont.org; www.arrowmont.org; 865-436-5860. Tennessee, Smithville September 11 to September 13 “Drinking Vessels,” with Melody Tiemann. Fee: $250; September 18 to September 20 “Improving Wheel Throwing Techniques,” with T.J. Edwards. Fee: $250. Contact Gail Gentry, Appalachian Center for Craft, 1560 Craft Center Dr., Smithville, TN 37166; ggentry@tntech.edu; www.tntech.edu/craftcenter; 615-597-6801. Texas, Marshall October 30 to November 1 “Small Town Raku,” with Steven Branfman. Fee: $275. Contact Erin Lambers, Pottery that Speaks, 610 West Burleson St., Marshall, TX 75670; erinspottery@gmail.com; www.erinspottery.com; 903-923-9728. Vermont, Shelburne September 26 to September 27 “Fired Up in the Fall: Naked Raku & Primitive Pit Firing,” with Bob Green. Fee: $195. Contact Shelburne Art Center, 64 Harbor Rd., Shelburne, VT 05482; info@shelburneartcenter.org; www.shelburneartcenter.org; 802-985-3648. Virginia, Lorton October 23 to October 25 “Pottery from 2 Perspectives,” with Donna Polseno and Ellen Shankin. Fee: $195. Contact Dale Marhanka, Lorton Arts Foundation and Workhouse Arts Center, 9504 Workhouse Way, Ceramics Bldg. 8, Lorton, VA 22079; dalemarhanka@lortonarts.org; www.workhousearts.org; 703-584-2982. Wisconsin, Fish Creek September 10 to September 12 “Put a Lid on It (and Handles, Too!),” with Jeanne Aurelius. Fee: $265; October 30 to October 31 “Sgrafitto Exploration and Studio Tour,” with Renee Schwaller. Fee: $125. Contact Kay McKinley Arneson, Peninsula Art School, PO Box 304, Fish calendar workshops Creek, WI 54212-0304; staff@PeninsulaArtSchool.com; www.peninsulaartschool.com; 920-868-3455. Wyoming, Jackson Hole September 17 to September 19 “Ceramics: Color and Design,” with Donna Rozman. Fee: $290; members, $265. Contact Sam Dowd, Art Association of Jackson Hole, 240 S Glenwood, Jackson, WY 83002; sam@artssociation.org; www.jacksonholeworkshops.org; 307-733-6379. Canada, Victoria October 24 to October 25 “The Teapot Form,” with Fong Choo. Fee: $143. Contact Meira Mathison, Metchosin Intl Summer School of the Arts, 650 Pearson College Dr, Victoria, British Columbia V9C 4H7 Canada; missa@pearsoncollege.ca; www.missa.ca; 250-391-2420. Denmark, Skælskør October 5 to October 9 “Takeshi Yasuda Workshop.” Fee: $424; members, $390; students, $339; October 12 to October 16 “Plaster Master Workshop,” with Richard Saaby. Fee: $424; members, $390; students, $322; October 26 to October 30 “Vitrified Print,” with Paul Scott. Fee: $424; members, $390; students, $322. Contact Ane Fabricius Christiansen, Guldagergaard International Ceramic Research Center, Jernbanevej 14, st. tv., Skælskør, 4230 Denmark; ceramic@ceramic.dk; www.ceramic.dk; 45 5819 0016. Greece, Skopelos Island September 10 to September 25 “Mia Muse,” with Suzy Birstein. Fee: $1800. Contact Gloria Carr, Skopelos Foundation for the Arts, PO Box 56, Skopelos Island, 37003 Greece; info@skopart.org; www.skopart.org; 604-737-2636. Greece October 2010 “Greek Island Ceramics Excursion.” Contact Denys James, Discovery Art Travel, 182 Welbury Dr., Salt Spring Island, British Columbia V8K 2L8 Canada; denys@denysjames.com; www.denysjames.com; 250-537-4906. Indonesia, Lombok and Bali March 7 to March 23, 2010 “Village Pottery Experience.” Contact Denys James, Discovery Art Travel, 182 Welbury Dr., Salt Spring Island, British Columbia V8K 2L8 Canada; denys@denysjames.com; www.denysjames.com; 250-537-4906. Indonesia, Ubud November 1 to November 14 “Western Raku and Smoke,” with Hillary Kane and Marcello Massoni. Fee: $1250. Contact Gaya Ceramic Arts Center, Jalan Raya Sayan, Ubud, Bali 80571 Indonesia; kane.hillaria@gmail.com; www.gayafusion.com; 62 361 979252 253. Indonesia, Ubud November 22 to December 5 “Finding Center,” with Hillary Kane and Marcello Massoni. Fee: $1250. Contact Gaya Ceramic Arts Center, Jalan Raya Sayan, Ubud, Bali 80571 Indonesia; kane.hillaria@gmail.com; www.gayafusion.com; 62 361 979252 253. Italy September 1 to September 6 “Graphic and Pictorial Techniques for Contemporary Ceramics,” with Mirco Denicolò Contact Alice Lombardelli, Casteldurante Cultura Ceramica, Italy; didattica@culturaceramica.it; www.culturaceramica.it; 39 328 33 70 724. Italy, Florence October 4 to October 17 “Framing Food in Italy: Making Pots at La Meridiana,” with Jan Edwards. Fee: $2800. Contact Jan Edwards,, 2650 S.W. Custer, Portland, OR 97219; clayjan@mac.com; http://web.mac.com/clayjan/iWeb/Site/The%20Workshop.html; 503-245-1583. Japan October 2 to October 11 “Ceramics and Crafts of Japan,” with lodging and meals. Fee: $4750. Contact Esprit Travel & Tours, 9533 Rancho Palmas, Las Vegas, NV 89117; info@esprittravel.com; www.esprittravel.com/tours/ceramicstour.html; 702433-0966. Japan, Mashiko October 30 to November 1 “10th World Art Educators Workshop in Japan: Architectural Ceramics,” with Ikuzo Fujiwara Contact Ikuzo Fujiwara, Fujiwara Earthen Art Studio, 70 Naka, Ashinuma, Mashiko, Japan; euan.craig@gmail.com. Mexico, Oaxaca December 16 to December 29 “Christmas in Oaxaca.” Fee: $3690. Contact Tom and Sherry Wilson, Craft World Tours, 6776 Warboys Rd., Byron, NY 14422; 585-548-2667. Morocco October 28 to November 15 “Morocco Excursion.” Fee: $3175. Contact Denys James, Discovery Art Travel, 182 Welbury Dr., Salt Spring Island, British Columbia V8K 2L8 Canada; denys@denysjames.com; www.denysjames.com; 250-537-4906. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 77 classified advertising Ceramics Monthly welcomes classifieds in the following categories: Buy/Sell, Employment, Events, Opportunities, Personals, Publications/Videos, Real Estate, Rentals, Services, Travel. Accepted advertisements will be inserted into the first available print issue, and posted on our website (www.ceramicsmonthly.org) for 30 days at no additional charge! See www.ceramicsmonthly.org/classifieds.asp for details. buy/sell publications/videos 3000 used ceramic molds for sale. All occasions/ variety. Local pick up only; Bath, Maine. Email judynickerson@yahoo.com or call (207) 443-1670. PotteryVideos.com – DVD’s with Robin Hopper, Gordon Hutchens and Graham Sheehan. Video Workshops for Potters at all levels of experience. Choose from 21 titles. (800) 668-8040; info@potteryvideos.com. Complete Studio for Sale in Boston Area. Wheel, Skutt 1027-3 kiln, de-airing pugmill, slab roller, extruder, scales, 300 lbs. of raw materials and much more. Call (781) 605-1183 or email timhenning55@aol.com for complete list and prices. Tom Turner’s 2-day workshop, 4-disc DVD set. To order, see www.tomturnerporcelain.com; or call (828) 689-9430. Albany Slip. It’s the real thing! The last load from the original mine. Make those great Albany slip glazes again, from cone 6 to 11. At cone 10–11, it fires a deep glossy brown. For fur ther infor mation, contact the Great American Wheel Works, in New York, at (518) 756-2368; e-mail tflitto@msn.com. employment Studio manager position at Genesee Pottery, Rochester, NY. Must be knowledgeable in studio maintenance and kiln firing. Salary plus studio benefits. Contact Kate Whorton, pottery@geneseearts.org; (585)271-5183. events real estate Beautiful Solar Studio, Magnificent land, Affordable home for sale in upstate New York, 6 acres on the Hudson near Saratoga Springs. Operational pottery for 35 years. Studio: 3 spacious rooms + finished gallery. House: 3bedroom/1bath, deck, washer/dryer, wood stove. House needs work! Must see. $150,000. Lease to Own option available. (518) 692-7742. www. BrendaMcMahonCeramics.com/info/sale.html. For Sale: Laloba Ranch & Art Center, Steamboat Springs, Colorado. Gorgeous Rocky Mountain Horse Ranch on beautifully fenced 40 acres. Keep as art center or use as personal or corporate retreat. Only 12 miles to international resort town of Steamboat Springs. Inclusions: charming main home with separate faculty apartment, 5 bedroom guest house, studio, 2-story horse barn and shop, kiln shed and kilns, 2 hot tubs, 2 saunas, hiking trails, and ponds. $1,900.000. For full brochure call (970) 870-6423. “Handbuilt”. Philadelphia, PA, September 17-19, 2009 – Demonstration, Inspiration, Conversation. Handbuilding Conference to benefit CERF. Demonstrators: Hayne Bayless, Sandi Pierantozzi, Lisa Naples, Holly Walker. Guest Speaker William Daley. www.sandiandneil.com Santa Fe, New Mexico Artist Compound. Home, studio, guesthouse in spectacular setting. 5000+ sq. Ft. on 1.5 acres IN TOWN. Fully equipped high fire studio, spacious rentable guesthouse. Artistically designed home. $1,370,000. Partner considered. Contact maxnm@aol.com for pictures and information. Fired Up in the Fall - Naked Raku and Pit Firing with Bob Green; September 26 & 27. Shelburne Art Center, Shelburne, Vermont. For more information http://www.shelburneartcenter.org/. Spring Green,WI. Retiring after 35+ years. Studio/retail shop and home for sale. Includes classic 4-bedroom mission style home; 2000 sq. Ft. fully-equipped studio and sales room; 3-car detached garage on one acre in beautiful rural valley. Area home of Frank Lloyd Wright, House on the Rock, American Players Theatre. Available January 2010. For more info (608) 588-2195. CHRIS GUSTIN WORKSHOP — www.cubcreek.org. Tom Turner’s Pottery School. For details, see www.tomturnerporcelain.com; or call (828) 689-9430. opportunities Get Centered. Steven Hill Pottery at Center Street Clay. centerstreetclay.com. RESIDENCY — www.cubcreek.org. Mid-Coastal Maine Potter’s Retreat. Beautiful ceramics studio/living space on 110 acres. Woods trails, swimming pond, private lessons and critiques/group workshops. Nearby ocean and sailboat. www.starflowerfarmstudios.com; (207) 525-3593. Central Florida Artist/Potter’s Studio! 212 sq. Ft. art studio w/lots of light, heavy-duty wiring, separate entrance from tropical garden patio, attached to a gorgeous custom-built Mediterranean style 3-bedroom, 2-bath home! Close to Stetson University’s superb Art Department, Orlando and world-famous beaches! Ideal locale of year-round art shows and tourists. Blake Rambo (386) 956-8417; blakerambo@adamscameron.com. rental Access to Wood/Salt/Soda/Raku Gas Kilns. Community & Private Studios. Residency opportunities in beautiful Taos, New Mexico. Rent starting at $70/month. www.taosclay.com. Ceramics Monthly September 2009 78 services Manabigama Wood Firing Kiln Plans Available. Fires and flashes 30 cubic feet of pots in 8 hours using 1/2 cord wood. Great teaching kiln. Plans include architectural drawings, material list, kiln construction CD and more. Manabigama kiln building and wood fire workshops available. Contact John Thies at monocacypottery@comcast.net or call (301) 898-3128. Ceramics Consulting Services offers technical information and practical advice on clay/glaze/kiln faults and corrections, slip casting, clay body/glaze formulas, salt glazing, product design. Call or write for details. Jeff Zamek, 6 Glendale Woods Dr., Southampton, MA 01073; (413) 527-7337; e-mail fixpots@aol.com; or www.fixpots.com. Master Kiln Builders. 26+ years experience designing and building beautiful, safe, custom kilns for universities, colleges, high schools, art centers and private clients. Soda/salt kilns, wood kilns, raku kilns, stoneware kilns, sculpture burnout kilns, car kilns and specialty electric kilns. Competitive prices. Donovan. Phone/fax (612) 250-6208. Custom Mold Making—Increase your productivity and profits with quality slip-casting molds of your popular designs! Petro Mold Co. offers a complete range of mold-making services, including sculpting and 3-D models, master and case molds, and production mold manufacturing to thousands of satisfied customers. Visit www.custommolds.net; or call (800) 404-5521 to get started. Accept credit cards in your ceramics retail/wholesale/ home-based/Internet and craft-show business. No application fee. No monthly minimum. No lease requirement. Retriever/First of Omaha Merchant Processing. Please call (888) 549-6424. Web Sites for Potters - We specialize in custom designed sites for artists, crafts people. New sites, redesigns, maintenance. Visit www.webkazoo.com/ ceramics or call (860) 664-9593. travel Craft & Folk Art Tours. Christmas in Oaxaca (Mexico), Myanmar (Burma), India, Bhutan, Central Asia, Morocco, Ecuador, Guatemala. Small, personalized groups. CRAFT WORLD TOURS, 6776CM Warboys, Byron, NY 14422; (585) 548-2667; www.craftworldtours.com. Morocco 2009 Ceramics Excursion - October 28-November 15, 2009. Offered again in 2009 due to popular demand. www.discoveryarttravel.com. Overseas Ceramic Workshops & Tours—Morocco, October 28 - November 15, 2009, Berber traditional pottery, adobe architecture, tile art in Southern Morocco. Lombok and Bali, March 2010, Crete, Greece, October 2010. Burma (Myanmar) February 2011. Small, culturally-sensitive groups using local translators and experts. Discovery Art Travel, Denys James, Canada; (250) 537-4906; www.denysjames.com; denys@denysjames.com. index to advertisers Aardvark Clay & Supplies...........65 Clay Art Center/Scott Creek........10 ACerS Books...............................79 Clay-King.com...............................9 Amaco and Brent............... Cover 2 ClaySpace...................................74 American Museum of Ceramic Art Clayworks Supplies.....................77 (AMOCA).....................................21 Continental Clay..........................71 L & L Kiln Mfg................................4 Armory Art Center.......................67 Cool Japan Project Inc. ..............69 L&R Specialties...........................77 Sheffield Pottery..........................73 Artworks/West Side YMCA..........74 Coyote Clay & Color....................58 Larkin Refractory Solutions.........73 Shimpo..................................13, 28 Cress Mfg....................................14 Master Kiln Builders....................77 Bamboo Tools..............................76 Davens Ceramic Center..............66 Mesa Art Center..........................75 Bennett Pottery..............................7 Discovery Art Travel....................76 MKM Pottery Tools.......................74 BigCeramicStore.com.................70 Dolan Tools..................................77 Mudtools......................................69 Bracker’s Good Earth Clays........66 Enduring Images.........................65 New Mexico Clay.........................76 Euclid’s/PSH................................72 92nd St. Y....................................75 Bailey Pottery....................1, 19, 61 Carolina Clay Connection............74 Hood College (Hodson Gallery).. 59 Kentucky Mudworks....................77 Klopfenstein Art Equipment........69 North Star Equipment..................23 Portion Master.............................67 Potters Council......................73, 74 Potters Shop................................77 Rockland Colloid.........................77 Skutt Ceramic............... 15, Cover 4 Smith-Sharpe Fire Brick Supply..12 Soldner Clay Mixers....................76 Spectrum Glazes.........................60 Speedball Art Products...............63 Standard Ceramic Supply...........72 Trinity Ceramic Supply................64 Ceramic Supply Chicago............76 Georgies Ceramic & Clay............65 CeramicArtsDaily.org....................8 Giffin Tec........................................2 Old Farmhouse Pottery...............67 Chilean Ceramics Workshop.......76 Great Lakes Clay.........................71 Olympic Kilns................................3 Chinese Clay Art.........................75 Handmade Tile Assn...................68 Paragon Industries....... 11, Cover 3 Classifieds.............................78, 79 Herring Designs/SlabMat............77 PCF Studios.................................77 Venco USA..................................77 Clay Art Center............................72 Highwater Clays..........................71 Peter Pugger Mfg........................25 Ward Burner Systems..................70 Ceramics Monthly September 2009 79 Truro Center for Arts....................76 Tucker’s Pottery...........................62 U.S. Pigment................................75 Comment the perfect match by Lily Zopfi It is 12:30 am and I am stretching to relieve have gone back for seconds). I try my hardest the pain I am already feeling in my lower to see if I recognize anything in the box as back. We just finished loading the last kiln of my own. It is quickly picked up and placed the semester. The annual “Christmas Pottery in front of me at the checkout table. I posiSale” is this Friday; the kiln will run tomor- tion myself behind the newspaper to partake row and be out in plenty of time to sort and in the final presentation of the pot, carefully price the remaining pots. wrapping each as I bag them and hand them Students have been asking for weeks if off to their new owner. And there it is; the they can come by to get an early look at the moment I work for all semester. I have finally work. Those who have been here for three come into contact with the individual for years now have finally learned that the elderly whom that pot had been made. I have been ladies who wait outside, boxes in hand, show able to make and create and play all semester little mercy—so this year they are ready, too. and now it is their turn. They have taken adIt is my favorite time of year. The student union building is lined with tables on either side. You can hear the Christmas music the moment you enter. The noise alternates between the hum of conversation and the clinking of pots being inspected on and off the table. Thursday night is almost as good as early Friday morning. There is an unspoken understanding that the upper-level clay students get the tables closest to the checkout table. That’s me this year, so I lay out the culmination of a semester’s work. Sleepless nights, several hundred pounds of smooth porcelain clay, and the final results of all the technical and aesthetic struggle now lie A plate and mug by Lily Zopfi, Dayton, Tennessee. before me. I love this moment. It is not unlike the moment when I have removed all the clay from the mixer and vantage of this opportunity to choose which turn to see it piled behind me, lumped upon pot will best meet their needs, whether it be itself with weighty inertia, anxiously waiting function, durability or aesthetic addition, that to become something. It’s also not unlike pot is about to be used just as I intended. It the moment a mother looks at her daughter, is so fascinating to see the personality of both now grown and successful, and thinks back pot and person complement one another. I to the time of diapers and pacifiers—pure anxiously await the next customer, feeling just potential. It is a proud feeling. You alone as much contentment as I wrap a mug or bowl know the struggle, the hard work, the days made by my studio mates. They have finally where perhaps you thought nothing good found their match. was going to come of this. And now look The semester had not been so full of such where you are. motivation or passion, however. For a time, Friday morning, I enter the building to see I had gotten into the rhythm of just making. every table full, Christmas music reminding While there is validity in the phrase “from the guests that what lies before them may quantity comes quality,” there is also somemake a perfect gift. There they are, the little thing limiting about mere repetitious producladies with their determination and cardboard tion. Your work will say it all. I had become boxes. There are a few boxes full and already so driven by my final graduating exhibition lying under the checkout table (their owners and meeting its requirements that I almost Ceramics Monthly September 2009 80 forgot why I even spent the last three years committed to this work. I had used a handmade coffee cup only once and realized that there was a unique difference between drinking from it and from a machine-made mug. The ability that this simple object had to enhance that moment was so exciting and I wanted to learn more about it. Enjoying a cup of tea on the porch during a rainstorm and gathering with friends and family around the dinner table are moments that I want to promote, and clay gives me that opportunity. But there is a morality to making any kind of art; it is necessary that you always remember your passions, desires, and what brings you joy so that your work is a genuine reflection of you, the artist. This is my last Christmas sale. I expect there to be bittersweetness this year as I pack up the few pots that remain at 4 pm. I graduate in ten days with a bachelor of arts degree in ceramics and the whole art world lies before me. I am leaving with invaluable knowledge of technique and skill for which I am very grateful. Whether I happen upon a studio filled with motivated artists, each at the same place in life, or begin an intimate solo studio, I am most appreciative of the support and encouragement that I have received to never forget my first love. So whether it be experimentation, innovation, rainy-day tea, raku or the moment when pot meets person, remember your first love. Remember why you pursued this fascinating medium in the first place. Maybe it will come in the form of early morning coffee with a wood-fired mug. Or perhaps sitting down with fifty 1-pound balls of clay and just throwing for the pure enjoyment of touching and manipulating that beautiful supple material will remind you. Whatever it may be, the results of invoking that memory will be priceless; you will be happier and the work will be better. the author Lily Zopfi graduated from Union University in Jackson, Tennessee, in December 2008 and is currently pursuing ceramic studies with her husband in Dayton, Tennessee. A custom tile mural for Don Fesler in New Port Beach, California. Cha-Rie Tang fires her tiles to cone 5. After dipping the glaze, she hand rubs each piece to get just the right amount of clay body showing through the glaze. As a result, each piece is different from the next. “The Paragon Dragon has changed my life. I have accepted jobs up to 500 square feet of tiles without trouble.” —Cha-Rie Tang “The Paragon Dragon has changed my life,” said custom tile maker and architect Cha-Rie Tang. “A front-loading kiln is essential for tiles. I can load five layers easily. I can finally claim that I can offer Craftsman tiles for installation. “I use the kiln to do custom murals. Since I can fire up to 22" x 22", I carve relief panels in the style of Craftsman tiles. I have worked on the Pasadena landmark Greene and Greene Robinson House, an entrance wall for Santa Barbara’s Tile Collection, Isabelle Greene’s fireplace, a fountain for All Nations Church, numerous private commissions, and the new Los Angeles Public Library Exposition Park Branch. “In addition to firing ceramics, I have used the Dragon to fire architectural-sized glass. The computer controls are easy to use,” Cha-Rie added. Create breathtaking pottery in this exciting kiln. The Dragon exudes power. Its Architect Cha-Rie Tang of Pasadena, California with her Paragon Dragon front-loading kiln. This kiln is becoming a favorite with potters. It is easy to load, heavily insulated, and designed to reach cone 10 with power to spare. 16,500 watts heat the 24” wide, 24” deep, 27” high interior to cone 10 with ample power to spare. This results in long element life, because the elements do not “struggle” to reach high temperatures. Dropped, recessed grooves seat industrial-gauge elements for long life. The Sentry digital controller can calculate electrical usage. Learn to conserve energy by experimenting with firing speed, load density, etc. The extra insulation cools the kiln slowly to achieve dramatic shifts in glaze color such as iron reds. Long-lasting mercury relays power the elements. We offer a wide selection of top- and front-loading kilns. Call us or visit our website for a free catalog and the name of the Paragon dealer near you. 2011 South Town East Blvd. Mesquite, Texas 75149-1122 800-876-4328 / 972-288-7557 Toll Free Fax 888-222-6450 www.paragonweb.com info@paragonweb.com