Ink and Clay 32
Transcription
Ink and Clay 32
About Ink & Clay Ink & Clay is an annual competition, established in 1971, of prints and drawings; ceramic ware and clay sculpture sponsored by the W. Keith and Janet Kellogg University Art Gallery of California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. The primary underwriting is through the generosity of Col. Jim Jones. Ink and Clay is an exhibition open to all of the Western States including Alaska and Hawaii. Peter Held Juror Statement Peter Held is currently Curator of Ceramics at the Ceramic Research Center, part of the ASU Art Museum at Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ. Held also serves as a trustee for the American Craft Council.Peter Held received his B.S. degree in studio art from the State University of New York at Brockport, where he studied ceramics with Bill Stewart. Upon graduation, he moved to Helena, MT to become a resident artist at the Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts. He later completed a Masters degree in Museum Administration at Oregon State University and interned at the Portland Art Museum. He returned to Helena in 1994 to serve as Executive Director and Curator of the Holter Museum of Art. Peter has curated over fifty exhibitions since 1989 including five traveling ceramic shows: Ashen Beauty: Woodfired Ceramics, David Shaner: A Potter's Work, 1963-1993, Sisters of the Earth: Native American Ceramics, A Ceramic Continuum: Fifty Years of the Archie Bray Influence and the upcoming exhibition Between Clouds of Memory: Akio Takamori, A Mid-Career Survey. Held has authored numerous articles on contemporary art and crafts, and is the editor of the books A Ceramic Continuum: Fifty Years of the Archie Bray Influence and the forthcoming publication Between Clouds of Memory: Akio Takamori, A Mid-Career Survey. The following is Peter's response when asked what his philosophy, as a juror, would be: Regardless of media, art engages me on many levels - pure aesthetics, skill of execution, conceptual strength, and emotional fortitude. I favor work that expresses the joys and dilemmas of everyday life, transcending the ordinary and predictable. Good art captivates your and is capable of touching the viewer in profound ways; enough to want a return visit. Peter Held Marilyn A. Zeitlin Juror Statement Marilyn A. Zeitlin, Director and Chief Curator of the Arizona State University Art Museum conceptualize the overall institutional direction. Zeitlin has over twenty years of museum experience as a curator and director. The focus of her curatorial work is the relationship of art to social issues and the interface between art and science. She received her A.B. and M.A.T. from Harvard University. She has taught art history in Asian and Pre-Columbian art and contemporary art at Cornell University, Bucknell University, and Virginia Commonwealth University.. Her recent exhibitions include Contemporary Art from Cuba and Art Under Duress: El Salvador 1980- Present. Zeitlin served as the U.S. Commissioner to the 100th anniversary Biennale in 1995, curating Bill Viola: Buried Secrets, which toured nationally and internationally. The following is Marilyn's response when asked what her philosophy, as a juror, would be: What does this object tell me in terms of ideas, technique, history, and personal expression? I don't expect every object to break new ground, but one that does, by defining parameters in a new way or suggesting a new approach to an enduring question, will engage me. In the end, I try to find work that conveys conceptual and narrative content in a language of form and through technical prowess to carry something of meaning from the artist to us out here, or even to draw us into the thinking and feeling of the artist. Marilyn A. Zeitlin Ink Artists' Statements SRBOOHIE ABAJIAN IRENE ABRAHAM KEN ALDRIDGE RICHARD ASH III JESUS BARRAZA BETTY BASTAI SANDRA BEARD WANDA BECKER ANN BINGHAM FREEMAN PAMELA BLOTNER TONIA BONNELL JOY BROOM JANE BURGUNDER KIM CHESELKA MARK COLLOP STACY ELKO KEVIN EVANS BETTY FIELD HALEY KATHI FLOOD SUZANNE FONTAINE STEVE GIBSON CAROLE GREER GAIL GWINN DIRK HAGNER ART HAZELWOOD NICOLE HENDERSON RICHARD HUTTER EUNICE KIM MACHIKO KONDO PAMELA LANZAZ ANTHONY LAZORKO JOHN OLIVER LEWIS ANN LINDBECK JUSTIN LORENZEN ENRICA MARSHALL KATHERINE MC GUINNESS DIANE MC LEOD J C MUHS KAREN NEUBERT JAMES PACE RIE PALKOVIC SARAH PAVSNER ROD REPLOGLE WAYNE RICE FAVIANNA RODRIGUEZ THOMAS SCHLOTTERBACK KATHERINE SHEEHAN MIKE STEPHENS THOMAS STUBBS D SWAN SULLIVAN ZOLITA SVERDLOVE ANNETTE TOSTI YIDA WANG RICKY WEISBROTH MIKE YOUNGMAN Clay Artists' Statements LAUREN AVI MARGOT BAKER JAMES BENN JOE BOVA SKUJA BRADEN HEATHER BRADLEY SUSAN BUDGE GARY CARLOS CORIE COLE JAMES COQUIA PATSY COX LYNN DORAN CATHY FEISS ANTHONY FOO JERE FRUTCHEY OVIDIO GIBERGA HEIDI PREUSS GREW BARRY & ROSAIJND HAGE WES HARVEY INGRID HENDRIX STEVE HILTON JUDY HIRAMOTO RYAN HORVATH DAVID KIDDE ALEX KRAFT MICHAEL KRAPES DANA KROOS FORREST LESCH MIDDELTON JOHN OLIVER LEWIS CONNIE MAJORTRICIA MC GUIGAN UNA MJURKA AMIK0 MATSUO LISA NEIMETH JEFFREY NETZER FARRADAY NEWSOME RICHARD NICKEL LINDSAY OESTERRITTER JENNA PERSTLINGER SASHA REIBSTEIN JEFF REICH JIM ROMBERG DONNA ROZMAN PORNTIP SANGVANICH RUTH SANTEE STEVEN SCHAEFFER KEITH SCHNEIDER MARTY SHUTER JINSOO SONG CHRIS THEISS KEVIN WALIER JENCHI WU Special Awards Ink & Clay 32 extends its congratulations to the outstanding artists featured here as this year's winners of the Juror's Award, Patrons Award and Presidents Award, as well as Honorable Mentions. Jurors Award Yida Wang Wes Harvey Birthmark I & II Dunce Boy Charcoal, hand print Slip cast porcelain Patrons Award Kim Cheselka Clear Affection India ink Patsy Cox Parodia Growth Clay, Engobe President's Award Enrica Marshall At the River Screenprint Keith Schneider Mr Congeniality Ceramic Honorable Mentions Ann Bingham Freeman Magnesium Steve Hilton Etching 32,312…32,313… Stoneware Heidi Preus Grew The Ego Stoneware, stick Faraday Newsome Persephone’s Pitcher Terra Cotta Wayne Rice Shorakusai’s Dream Monoprint, w/ handcoloring Richard Ash III Stockbroker Screenprin Contact Ink and Clay 32 Your contact for information is Patrick Merrill, Gallery Curator. He can be reached at (909) 869-4301, or email at pemerrill@csupomona.edu Gallery Layout and Panoramas The above diagram shows the Gallery Layout. Lauren Avi From a normal, respectful viewing distance, imagery that's compelling on an archetypal level is already apparent in the dictionary pages of Lauren Avi. The subconscious mind recognizes the round indentations on the page edges and the justified columnar text as a dictionary even before the conscious mind grasps the realization. The conscious mind is likely to be attracted first by the brightness and variation of colors from piece to piece, and second by the strange scenes depicted in the confident lines of the artist.It also becomes clear that the dictionary is very old, a ninety-year-old Funk and Wagnell,s, and that the bible-paper pages are placed together in fours. Lauren Ari paints a field of color over the pages, but allows specific words and images to jump to the foreground. These are interwoven with overpainting to create whimsical, strange, engrossing studies of language, learning, and the definitions of this reality. An interesting aspect of the work is that its mode of being contemporary includes in a concrete way the beginning of the twentieth century in its reflections on the beginning of the twentyfirst.You may view images of the work at www.Klaudiamarrgallery.com and Laurenari.com. Peace Dictionary , Paint Margot Baker Margot is currently working with the human gesture as well as with the gesture of the clay itself. She feels that her work demonstrates a successful blending of these two aspects. When I was working larger, I would often be startled when I passed one of my pieces, thinking there was another person in the room. I was intrigued with this quality of realism - and the figures weren't even realistically rendered! I feel I have translated this surprise impact into my smaller pieces as well, and am enjoying the results immensely. Another aspect of surprise in many of Margot's sculptures is the way her figures resolve as the viewer moves around them, not always in the predicted manner. On several levels, Margot's work offers us a new way of seeing. Some of the other themes Margot has been working with include a grids and pieces motif which she says is autobiographical. Some of her ceramic tile-work reflects her earlier interest in printmaking and also continues her grids and pieces theme. Margot Baker received her B.A. degree from Calif. State U. Long Beach, and her M.F.A. from Otis Art Institute with a major in sculpture and a minor in printmaking. A native Californian, Margot currently lives on her 4 acres in Pinon Hills. Woman Moving Forward Clay Betty Bastai My artwork is primarily mixed media drawings on paper and site specific installation art. It deals with the theme of nature and how we perceive it through our senses, culture and knowledge. Sale is a mixed media installation composed of text on a square made of rock salt, 12 stones, steel wire, four drawings on acetate sheets, one drawing on a white shirt and one drawing on a pair of white pants. I created these drawings at Oak Harbor Beach Park, WA, in the summer 2005. They are a part of a series of over 500 drawings called maps, an ongoing art project that began in 1998. The installation is a three dimensional bio-lingual poem that has a self-contained yet fragmented structure where written language and pictorial visual elements mingles ambiguously in a rather 'dislocated' manner. Its meaning is multi-layered and relies on the viewer's personal response to 'catch' all its loose ends and 'knit' them into a personal cohesive whole. On one hand it resembles a riddle that plays with the meaning of words according to their phonetic sounds (Sale it is both the Italian word for salt and the English word for the act of selling depending on how you pronounce it). On the other it is a drawing that represents both an abstract-conceptual seascape and a figurative and familiar one populated with sea creatures and field observations. Water 2 installation ( mixed media) James Benn My work is inspired by nature. Succulents, pods, kelp and other earthly elements provide a language of form, of texture, of suspended orientations and translucent skins. In each being, each object, I see sculpture, lighting or furniture, art and design joined, beauty and powerful simplicity. I strive to create pieces that are vital and that have a strong presence. They are sensual, encouraging one to experience not only on a visual level but, as well, through touch. My work is infused with qualities familiar to the beholder and attempts to seduce on an emotional level. In my creative process, I employ sculpting and casting techniques. They satisfy my need to work with my hands and to solve design problems. I sculpt in clay and in wood, building according to my own specifications and idiosyncrasies. I am enabled to make solid forms out of liquid with almost immediate results casting in porcelain, silicone and glass . These media afford translucency, strength and limitless surface textures. As light, often an important element in my work, passes through each piece, hidden qualities are revealed in both the material and in the form. They seem to come alive. Expectations Porcelain, Glass Joe Bova The human figure is central to my work even when the image is animal. The animal image is symbolically surrogate. Social content and commentary is central. Animals have always enthralled me. Among artists in my own time I have admired the work of Robert Arneson and Giacomo Manzú the most. Arneson for content and bravado and Manzu for his handling clay as an expressive material. Sometimes I have tried in my work to exploit the plastic quality of clay in such a way that if a word analogous to "painterly" existed then "clayerly" would describe my work. My work since 2003 has been responsive to the misguided policies of my government. As the 19th Century Republican senator from Missouri, Charles Schurz said in 1861, "Our country, right or wrong. When right, to be kept right, when wrong to be put right." I am trying in my small way. Tank Ceramic Prosthetic Warrior Ceramic Skuja Braden Bodhisattva Porcelain The first and most frequent question asked of us is, “Who does what?” I think that most collaborative teams do indeed divide up the work according to individual talents. Usually in ceramics, the husband and wife is the ultimate team, with one person concentrating on the creation of the form and the other person concentrating on the surface decoration. This is not how we work at all and we are not a husband and wife team. Most of the teams I have looked into also tend to come from the same culture. We work on everything together. We talk about our ideas and then we draw pictures for each other and then we alter each other’s drawings to see if we cannot make the idea more perfect. Once we have both decided that the idea is good, the form good, and the design is a good concept, we begin to build the forms. We draw patterns from our drawings, and then hand build all of our pieces. If we really like the form we make a mold from it and slip cast or press mold in porcelain. Usually we make two pieces at a time and continuously switch places to work on each other’s forms. When people ask us who did what, we usually cannot easily say because the boundaries of our individual marks have become blurred by the time each piece is actually completed. The ideas come out of conversations between Inguna and myself and often times are actually based on the breakdown between our collective understandings. In other words, we are fascinated by the difficulty in truly understanding another’s ideas and the point where we witness the vast distances created through miscommunication. Some of our most successful pieces are actually rooted in the space between understanding and misunderstanding. Heather Bradley I am an artist who works with clay. I am also a painter. I am a painter who has found that clay is, for me, the best canvas. My work is soulful and obsessive. It is also decorative and ornamental. I imbue the surface of the clay with a frenzy of line indicative of my restless energy and need for expression. My process allows me to escape to a meditative, intuitive state in which I am free to explore and discover. The pattern is created with imagination, allowing myself the freedom to let my brush or carving tool roam. The designs relate to plant and floral imagery that I have absorbed from various sources, but are ultimately my own visual wanderings, drawings that flow naturally when I clear my mind of that which is not my own. My vessels and paintings contain my abundant creative, mental and physical energy. They are a celebration of my privilege and freedom to make art. Crescendo Wheel Thrown Vessels Acrylic on Board Susan Budge Eye Spy Nude Clay Gary Carlos New images of our world are becoming more common everyday: footage from a traffic helicopter at rush hour, the view from a budget airline window seat, or satellite images from recent military campaigns. I overlay these perspectives of the landscape with images that connect the everyday with nature, history, mythology, popular culture, and social politics. These landscapes look back at us trying to reveal some message for today. It is this view from above that best illustrates our world, not as a series of boundary lines, but as a complex, fragile living entity. Shielded Ceramic Corie Cole Clay is such a seductively direct medium—it is so inherently plastic and malleable and can be used comparatively rapidly to make a palpable, intransient statement. (as intransient as any object vulnerable to a hammer.) Other media like type journalism, television and film seem to have an aspect of impermanence, perhaps due only to their ubiquity and hyper-saturation, and their dependence on advanced technology. I’ve tried over the past three years to filter through this morass of media to condense and render my understanding of politics and power into a series of sculptures. I want the work to transcend the role of the OP-ED political cartoon. I think of them as permanent political cartoons or commemorative statues of ideas, psychologies and situations I’d rather folks not forget too hastily. Iraqi Horrror Ceramic The working title of this series of political cartoons is “Show Business,” referring to the series’ allusions to film and television, and to my perception that the political arena is like an over-budget made-for-TV movie. Many characters in politics seem increasingly slickly engineered to fit an expected archetype of the American consciousness. Political camps are judged by the effectiveness of their manufactured image, because image is what consumers have been accustomed to valuing, and image is often all they have time to pay attention to. Sadly, the political players all too often are unable to live up to the archetype created for them. I intend my sculptures to examine and critique some of the roles our icons play on the world stage. James Coquia James was born in Oakland, CA, November 14, 1972. After serving four years in the United States Marine Corps (1992- 1996), he returned to the bay area and enrolled at the local community college. He had aspirations of expressing his creativity through painting, but decided that to more well round himself as an artist, he would take every studio art class that was offered there. Near simultaneously he tried his hand at everything from photography to multi-media sculpture, printmaking to digital imaging. Most struck a meaningful chord with him but none so much as when he first touched his hands to clay. By his own admission the introduction sounds a little cliché, but something magical happened that day, a kind of sympathetic symbiosis. The material was alive and in its way spoke to him, so tenderly that it cemented an indelible relationship between the two. There seemed to be a mutual understanding that together each made the other one better. His introduction to ceramics took the form of back to back classes, one emphasizing the wheel, the other on hand built sculpture. For the next several years he remained singularly focused on the cultivation of that relationship. As he explored deeper into the multifaceted medium, opportunities would present themselves, opportunities that could neither be ignored nor denied. True to his adventurous spirit, James followed the opportunities regardless of where they took him physically. They eventually lead to numerous positions at prominent public and private institutions. As a studio assistant and apprentice, he was fortunate enough to assist and learn first hand from a number of ceramics most eminent artists. As lab technician he had the opportunity to hone his skills at glaze calculation and kiln firing. Dicephalapod Stoneware James continues to divide his creative energies between what he now refers to as the utilitarian object and the humanistic object. Having spent a significant amount of time in Japan and Asia, eastern sensibilities have manifested in his art. The masterworks of the Japanese Momoyama period, the quiet aesthetics of shibui, the philosophy of wabi and sabi, Chanoyu (the Japanese tea ceremony), all have greatly influenced every aspect of his ceramic work. Equally, coming from a painting background, some of his earliest heroes included: Odd Nerdrum, Egon Schiele, Lucian Freud, Frida Kahlo and Pablo Picasso. It seemed a natural transition to include the human figure into his ceramic repertoire. The organic is his fundamental teacher. James finds much of his inspiration from elements of the natural world: the subtle nuances of a seed pod, the dendritic patterning in leaves, the supple quality of eucalyptus bark, the way flesh folds. These are but a few of nature's gifts that drive his creative spirit. James believes that everything on this planet shares a commonality, that everything is connected to everything else, and his work is simply an exploration of that belief. Patsy Cox My inspiration is derived from science, culture, the natural world and urban sprawl. I am concerned with ideas of influence and assimilation. Parodia Growth Interaction Clay, Engobe My most current work embodies mutations, hybrids, growth, and cross-pollination. Multiple forms can stand as individual pieces and also parts of a cohesive whole. When the pieces are grouped together, it's not clear where one begins and the next one ends, which is the original and which is the mutation. While most of my work does not refer to a particular geographical location, my most recent projects have grown out of my own relationship to Los Angeles-its communities; its sheer mass; its blending of boundaries; its mixtures of language and culture. I focus on capturing the overwhelming nature of a sprawling city and often use the primary colors of blue, yellow and red to emphasize the possibility of its transformation-all colors are possible from the mixture. Lynn Doran The creative process of working with clay is what I really enjoy. The initial concept or idea that I start with changes as I work with the clay. The clay has something to say and each time it is different. I don't try to control the clay - I listen to it. Life's experiences always surface in subtle ways - that last trip to Africa or Papua New Guinea makes its mark. Applied objects, after the clay is fired, create the personality or bring the piece to life. In "From The Depths" the porcelain eyeballs create that personality. Some find my work scarey, others find the humor.....pretty is usually not and adjective used. Evoking an emotion is the final reward to the creative process. From the Depths Raku, Porcelain Eyes Multi-Group (Grass) and (Sand), grew out of the desire to convey the sense of something being born or emerging from something protective. In this series, a smaller element gradually emerges from a larger form, protruding out of a womb-like or protective surrounding. These pieces could also represent a kind of regeneration or growth from one form to another, or something sprouting in nature. Growth Tiles Ceramic, Wood Cathy Feiss In my artwork, I am interested in expressing what I can't express easily in words. When I was younger, I was very interested in poetry and I feel that my interest in the visual arts comes from the same source, involving the construction of a kind of visual poem. Much of my work process is intuitive, or possesses intuitive elements within a rational framework. I am most interested in conveying a sense of energy, emotion, or an idea, through a form that may also have a planned and methodical basis. Recently, I finished a series inspired by real and imaginary pods and plants. These works show the intricate morphology of organic forms. The pieces in the series are based on a fuzzy Australian plant with external fin-like seed pods (Banksia Grandiflora II), flower-like or leaf-filled basins (Collectors, Radial (Tan), and Radial (Brown), a pod with emergent fins (Lamellate (White) and Lamellate Pair), and Growth Boxes Trio, from which sproutlike organisms emerge and germinate. Overall, my recent bodies of work are about birth and growth, variation among similar elements, the structure of natural forms, and a sense of communication and mystery in life. The works together convey a sense of interior versus exterior, support versus covering, and structure versus sensuousness. Anthony Foo I enjoy the abstract side of sculpture. Japanese culture and philosophy deeply influence my work. I‚m drawn to the aesthetic of form, shape, color, and yes, even thought. Giving shape and substance to something as abstract as an idea is difficult and challenging at the same time. How do I represent a mind thinking, focusing on this thing and that thing? What form does it take if its awareness is complete? What about when it‚s incomplete, imperfect? What shape does it have then? I chose the imperfect model, representing human frailty. The final shape took on a very mechanical and industrial feel, almost looking like the sea mines of World War II. The idea later came to make more of these, group them at different heights into a collection, and name them Mindfield- a play on the word minefield. I chose the color red for its strength, energy and spirit. Mind Field Paper, Clay Jere Frutchey My work is all about themes and variations. A constant altering statement of a basic idea, whether it be in form, color or surface design. Coming from an intense career in graphic design on the East Coast, my subtle work with handmade paper changed radically to bright colors and strong forms when I moved to the dynamic Southwest. Here I started my love affair with clay when exposed to several intense years of classes at the University of New Mexico. My heightened interest in texture and abstract forms became more evident after seeing numerous volcanic flows, weathered sand stone formations and experiencing the decidely different nature, culture and strong artistic energy of this area. All of these things I have tried to reflect in my present body of work. I am in constant search for new ways of joyful expression in whatever I do. . Infinity Clay, Glass, Mixed Ovidio Giberga Born into a Cuban family (in America), there had always been a sense of displacement or of living in exile. Home was wherever I happened to be, and my culture, reconciliation between past experience and my immediate environment. Each culture presents a unique set of challenges and choices. In this way acculturation became a personal process, instigating change within myself and my work. This body of work incorporates the male form as a freestanding sculptural vessel. I use symbolism and metaphor to convey autobiographical experiences concerning identity and acculturation. The gestures contain implied meaning, referencing specific cultural sources. The images and patterns glazed onto the surface serve as cultural symbols, derived from my immediate environment. Cylindrical stirrup spouts, through which the forms can be filled or emptied, suggest potential and purpose . Seated Male Stirrup Vessel With Organic Binding Ceramic Heidi Preuss Grew What I encounter in a given day provides potential inspiration for my work: fleeting moments of conversation, a given hand gesture used by a close friend, a proverb, a character in a novel, or a unique detail in a painting. I desire to capture, transform, and then share these observations. I usually respond sympathetically to a given moment while on rare occasion I desire to return an eye for an eye. The result consists largely of sketches, drawings, and figurative ceramic sculptures that are loose portraits of friends, community members, legendary people in history, or fictional characters inspired by literature and art. Transformation Porcelanous Stoneware, glaze, acrylic I seek to reveal the vulnerable and pathetic side of the human condition as well as the heroic and beautiful. My studio practice involves serious and playful endeavors as I meld animal and human features together to develop specific meaning, symbolism, and psychological impact. This combination allows greater freedom in the creative process as it straddles real and fictional worlds. Most of my work is sourced completely from my imagination, yet I at times I need to blatantly return to the human figure. Chuck's Advisor Stoneware The Ego Stoneware, Stick Creating my work is a very personal and intuitive process, but I can say specific materials consciously chosen do impact the outcome of a final work. For example, porcelain’s delicacy and sensual responsiveness facilitates the feminine ideal, the slick maneuverings of a crafty villain, or subtle gestures between divine figure groupings. On the other hand, rough stoneware results in more immediate and gritty surfaces ideal for characters that display a bohemian lifestyle or deep-set fatigue of unrelenting domestic labor. Beyond a title and comments at an exhibition opening, I tend to withhold the deeper intention behind most work and enjoy—rather selfindulgently—the speculative comments from viewers. . Barry & Rosalind Hage Our lifestyles had a direct influence upon our work. We both grew up on the beaches of southern California and have spent 36 years travelling extensively and enjoying various tropical landscapes and sea life surroundings. We have recently created a series of non-functional teapots, baskets, platters and jars. The varied vessel forms are decorated with color and surface designs reminiscent of our favorite locales. The process originates with low-fire clay, glazes and stains. Each piece combines wheel-throwing, hand-building and slab-construction. Metallic lusters enhance the design or lend an "attitude" to each piece. Some sculptures are embellished with cast clay objectseither hand-carved or collected from our adventures. Each completed clay sculpture is unique unto itself and entirely made by Barry and Rosalind. We foresee and embrace the evolution of our work. Education: Parrot in a Boat to Maui Teapot Ceramic Barry Hage: Bachelor of Arts, California State University, Long Beach, CA, 1969 Master of Fine Arts, UCLA, Los Angeles, VA 1973 Rosalind Hage: Bachelor of Arts, California State University, Long Beach, CA, 1970 Master of Science, Pepperdine University, Malibu, CA, 1975 2005/2006: Featured in Teapots, Makers and Collectors, Dona Z. Meilach . I create forms that are suggestive yet provocative at the same time. Sometimes I want there to be a clear definition as to what gender I am referencing, and at other times, I want the gender of the form to be somewhat ambiguous. In studying what the definition of gender is, I have come to realize that gender and sexuality are not a binary function, as most would believe. Gender and sexuality cannot be lumped into only two categories: male or female. These are just two of the many divisions of what gender is to me. It goes beyond only being male or female. P Pony Stoneware Wes Harvey Dunce Boy Slip Cast Porcelain The search for my self-identity through the investigation of gender and sexuality are the driving forces throughout my artwork. I use myself as a starting point and also a reference while constructing my forms. Coming from a divorced childhood, gender roles associated with the family have become blurred, and I am not always sure who is supposed to be what. I take this blurring of gender into my artwork and produce sculptures that create a dialogue with one another, asking the question: who is what? Color also plays a very important role in my artwork. I use color to emphasize the form and draw attention to certain aspects or elements of the form. Bright primary and secondary colors are what wait in my palette for me to use. Color, similar to gender, has many definitions associated within each hue. There is no wrong or right answer when looking at color, just the same as when looking at gender. What red means to me, may not be the same as the viewer’s interpretation. The gender question is something of infinite answers and I am only skimming the surface. . Ingrid Hendrix “There are more things in heaven and earth ... than are dreamt of in your philosophy.” Shakespeare, Hamlet I find that there is much more to each individual than what is seen on the surface. While in fact, the extraordinary lies within every human being. We are complex creatures containing many opposing elements, which make us complete. For instance, we contain both good and evil, male and female, and spiritual and material. We are not one or the other, we are both; we are a dichotomy. We are not stereotypes. In my work I use the human figure, along with religious and animal imagery to explore the depths of human consciousness and its unconscious roots. These pieces transform from human to animal and from conscious to unconscious. I try to reveal what lies underneath the surface of every human being by examining archetypal themes that can be seen in every culture and within every human being. These archetypes show up as recurring themes and images in myth, religion, and art from around the world. For example, I frequently concentrate on the Great Mother Archetype. I use her as a representation of all women. She is good and evil, nurturing and destructive, chaste and titillating. She contains many such dualities, as does every woman and every human being Preservation Ceramic Steve Hilton As a geologist and a clay artist, I have developed an appreciation for the anomalies in the many forms of life, clay, rock, and soil covering the Earth’s landscape. I am intrigued by the way plants, animals and weather influence the Earth’s surface, by both erosional and depositional means. This fascination has become an integral part of my art. 32,312...32,313...32,314 Stoneware I am currently thinking about these iterations (fractals), as I make my work. A fractal is a fragmented or geometric shape that is repeatedly subdivided into parts, each a smaller copy of the whole. The use of selfsimilarity or fractals in art allows me to interpret nature for the viewer and myself: with both of us seeing nature differently after spending time with my work. Fractals, according to the “math of today”, are an “explanation” of all objects and/or occurrences. In essence, a question I pose to myself, and to my audience is, “does math ‘explain’ beauty?” Is Odd Better Stoneware, Sand Cast Glaze Ryan Horvath My work involves paying attention to the common environment, collecting simple information and transforming it. I am receptive of and responsive to my surroundings. With my own curiosities and natural tendencies to experiment, I investigate the relationship of impulse and idea as physical and mental activities. Step Ceramic David Kidde My recent ceramic sculpture is not that of specific subject matter. Rather than copy a preconceived design, I much more enjoy the creative process when a work evolves as I am working, making decisions and discoveries as forms interact and dictate a final composition that is balanced, yet animated. I prefer to allow the ambiguity of my forms to incite a variety of interpretations. These sculptures utilize the assemblage of various organic orb shapes into clustered compositions. I have chosen the orb shape as a foundational element because its simplicity facilitates a plethora of readings. The orb is the building block that is the basis for many forms found in clusters in the micro world at the atomic, molecular and cellular level. The rotund orb shape is also the foundational element of figurative and biomorphic works that provides the voluptuous quality I strive for. Glazed surface textures and linear compositions are chosen as enhancements for the sculptural form. Orb Cluster 3 Stoneware Alex Kraft Manuch Di Quo Vitrium Ceramic, Mixed I see the internal structure of the body as being comprised of two main aspects. These are the physical internal and the sacred internal. The first is that which is material. This is the viscera. Included within are the organs, tissue, cells and so forth, from macro to micro. The second is that which is the intangible essence within. This includes the spirit. Emotion, intellect, intuition, and instinct are a part of this realm. The sacred internal and the physical internal are interconnected and consist of the same energy. This energy is that which makes up the being. It is as possible to feel emotion physically as it is to feel physical emotion because this energy comprises both the material and the immaterial. The sacred internal and the physical internal are made of the same life essence. In my work, the layers of the internal are the grounds for the external tangible forms I create. They are external in that they exist outside the internal body in their own space. My work expands upon my notions of the internal. The physicality of form, color, and surface correspond to the energy within: the physical and the sacred. Farnufin Ke Ceramic I look to further expand upon these concepts. I am interested in creating forms that become individuals unto themselves, exuding their own life force, while relating to my notions of the layers of the internal body. Michael Krapes My recent work with ceramics is primarily figurative. It is autobiographical. The series of “heads” I have been doing are self-portraits. I don’t plan my work, I allow it to unfold and evolve, that way it feels more genuine, honest, and connected to me. The recent works like this one “nine lives”, are about the layers of thought and feeling existing in any moment. The mix of faces, overlapping, and intertwining of reactions, emotions, and thoughts are present in me. . Nine Lives Ceramics Dana Kroos I am concerned with the relationship between architecture, landscape and the human form. My work explores the way that cultures attempt to build, alter and sculpt the body with the same methods that they use to erect and design buildings or landscape the earth in order to change their environments; constantly varying and affecting upon structures exterior, but encompassing, human beings. . Look Good: Be Tall Ceramics, Wire John Oliver Lewis This series of sculptures and plates are based on fantasy and play. What starts out as an idiosyncratic escape from this world via a self constructed rocket ship or the thought of a futuristic clubhouse, begins to transform into a peculiar sculpture about my vision. These flights of imagination are supported by the inspection of architecture, natural land formations, caricature, vehicles of travel, as well as cartoons, contemporary fashion, knick-knacks, boy’s and girl’s toys, fishing lures, and candy. I use recognizable forms combined with abstract patchwork to create sculptures that generate an erratic sense of purpose. The combinations of architectural, figurative, and abstract slab elements produce an allusion of an animated clubhouse or rocket ship. The placement and overlapping of slabs is integral to the formation of my work, and shows evidence of the construction process. This relaxed and sometimes-uncomfortable development of patches increases the clumsy characteristics of the sculpture. Matte and glossy colors are used to soften and promote the irregularities, without losing the innate qualities of the clay. The resulting sculpture is a comical union of my manifestations that has the appearance of candy. . No Room For Gloom Ceramic, Acrylic Connie Major As a continual student of life, I have learned that for me ceramics is all consuming; clay is clean dirt and I love to play in it. In contrast to years of precise and controlled work in gold, silver, and precious stones I needed to have an outlet of freedom and that has been clay. I love to throw on the potter’s wheel; I love the power, control, fluidity, and feel. I love to throw big, not worry about the cost, and have instant results. The classic Greek urn shape flows from my fingers without thought; it is a comfort zone. The Asian Sward uses a bone as the shape inspiration and is embellished with an Asian motif. The bone in this case was a turkey wing bone. Engineering a complex clay piece comes naturally. I spent much time on construction sites; my father was a contractor back when homes were built one at a time. There has been a life long emphasis on engineering from figuring out how to change a swing set into a fort, or re-using parts from a run-over flashlight, to re-furbishing the original front door lock on my 91 year old home, and of course in jewelry. The Asian Sward is made entirely with hand-building techniques and is constructed of four precise pieces that require interlocking assembly to create the single sculpture. The Asian Sward, required a smooth surface with limited carving and became an excellent surface for the hands-on low-fire glazing technique using floras chloride and the burning of horsehair creating the appropriate fine black carbon lines; a most enjoyable piece to make Asian Sward Amiko Matsuo space filler clay My exploration in ceramics has become several investigations about identity and the notion of invented traditions and heritage. These have increasingly become elements I express in my work. Through research, my personal understanding of ceramics has shifted into something existing in a variety of frameworks. Therefore, it becomes versatile and comprehensible, something forever changing and developing. Through disclosure of my personal identity within a body of work, it might begin to carry multiple reading as a reflection of collective identities. I strive and desire to acknowledge the context of the work in an increasingly global society. I created a mold from a chocolate Santa with the intent of producing an undetermined number of variant pieces; each piece individualized differently. I was fascinated by the idea that the project would have infinite possibilities with an undetermined goal and by the dualities of work and play, public and private, exposure and concealment that began to form through my process. The schismatic body of work while committed to the idea of recontextualization of the Santa form reflects my desire to synthesize various aspects of my personal identity. Migratory experiences at an early age has influenced the manner in which I consider different aspects of ‘Japaneseness’ and ‘tradition’, and this ‘self-consciousness’ has manifested itself within my body of work. The complex relationship that I have with my work is one that formed through the commitment to the medium of clay and involvement with the ceramics field. I hope to continue contemplating my pursuit to locate my work within a broader framework. Tricia Mc Guigan One of my primary interests is change, particularly, transformative change. Change is sometimes planned, fought for, and welcomed. It can also be spontaneous, inevitable, or resisted. In any change, new possibilities are created while others are precluded. I am interested in exploring the place of change or transformation in my artwork. In ceramics, this can be explored conceptually, structurally, or by attempting to harness the physical changes clay and glazes endure through the firing process. All That is Unseen Remains Porcelain, Stoneware I utilize edges in my work. Change is often associated with an edge: We speak of “turning a corner” or “being on the cutting edge.” In ceramics, the edge is fragile and often sharp. The edge may cause a glaze to thin, triggering a radical change of color. It is a place difficult to control, where the unexpected often occurs. In this series, I explore the notion of change and permanence existing together, in the way that we, as people are able to change, and yet remain distinctly ourselves. Similarly, a river’s path is changed by the rocks; the rocks are slowly changed by the river. Yet they both still remain: river and rocks. . Forrest Lesch Middelton My forms are functional and familiar. Details in the work can be suggestive of elements rarely regarded within the context of today’s complex pace, such as; patterns beneath a pond’s reflection, or grass covering an unturned stone. Subtlety speaks volumes, although it is not what initially draws ones attention, it soon becomes what holds ones focus. My hope is that through using my pots, people are reminded of the value of simpler times. Poppy Printed Cups With Saucers Reduct Cooled Stoneware Clay has always been my greatest teacher. It speaks with many voices; it can be subtle or loud, soft or abrasive, brittle or strong. There is an honesty found rooted within the material. Clay changes and reacts to each circumstance as if it were holding a conversation with its handler about touch. This conversation is what drives me to create works that are held, used, and admired daily. Once completed the work leaves my hands and a new conversation begins in the hands of the user. If one holds a cup that I have made my work is complete; if one’s attention is held by the cup, my work is understood. . Una Mjurka Empty...Full Ceramic My work is based upon a wide range of emotions, doubts and fears. I find it interesting to explore my own limitations, both mental as well as physical. In continuing to examine my own boundaries I’m continually reminded of the contrast between my wishful thinking and an existing reality. During my years of studies in what was once USSR controlled Latvia, I developed an abstract art vocabulary in reaction to the much preferred, Social Realist style of the period. Living in America has triggered a new appreciation of my own background and willingness to capture personal experiences in my artwork. My current imagery has shifted a great deal from the pure abstraction I have employed in the past to a stylized realism. In a formal manner, I have once again focused my attention on the search for visual lightness in the use of physically heavy materials. It has been a wonderful challenge to my craftsmanship. I have developed the ability to articulate details and surfaces in order to unify form and color and take advantage of their potential as significant expressive visual elements. For the last five years I have worked on a series of elaborate still lives. Initially, my compositions were heavily influenced by Dutch still life paintings of 17th century. As the series evolved, the focus has shifted several times finally settling on my interpretation of the interactive processes between an individual and his or her surroundings. I’ve always been curious about the components creating the psychological make-up of an individual. The Maslow pyramid associated with the hierarchy of need theory has informed some of my most current work. According to Maslow’s theory there are four levels of deficit needs (physiological, safety, belonging and esteem), which are essentially survival needs. When referring to a last fifth level of the pyramid, he used a variety of terms: growth motivation (in contrast to deficit motivation), being needs (or B-needs, in contrast to D-needs), and self-actualization. In the environment where socio-economic circumstances or behavioral conditioning forces an individual to focus their attention on the basic survival needs, a great deal of psychological discomfort and distortion can take place. Even though one could assume that in the developed countries all deficit needs can be met and easily fulfilled, thus providing a fertile environment for the growth motivation, it is surprising how few actually are reaching their creative potential. Food is one of our most basic deficit needs. Though, these days it is no longer used just for sustenance. More and more often food serves as a substitute to compensate for the lack of satisfaction in the other areas of our psychological needs. We use food as a communication device. We gain a sense of security through it. We fill emotional voids with physical nutrients and obtain a sense of belonging through food. It has become a friend, a symbol, an identity and even an obsession. As a society, we have a very peculiar relationship with our daily bread… My still lives are bountiful and rich, but somehow they remain distant. There is a false luring smell of an imprisonment of time and doom floating in the air. As if we are witnessing the last moments before decay sets in and gnaws away everything in sight. My intent is to create a situation where the viewer is forced to remain a passive voyeur while processes, triggered by passage of time, take place regardless of ones wishes or feelings. . Lisa Neimeth Altars, cemeteries, flocks of birds, waves—repetitive images organized around a theme or a symbol. The natural form of wood and clay and the shapes they take on after lying on a beach, baking in the sun or a kiln, breaking on the floor. Forces beyond our control, yet we attempt to organize them, study them scientifically to know and understand their mystique. Death, renewal, reviving and offering new life to objects long passed on. The elements of nature as depicted in scientific classifications—the bugs, birds and bones. Seeing specimens consecutively laid out in preparation for study encourage not just a clinical examination, but an aesthetic one as well. My work has evolved from these images and observations. What started out as an interest and education in ceramics, moved to a quest to travel and learn about ancient and modern lands and the symbols that represent them. I started collecting objects from my travels and searched for ways to properly display them. I found that my ceramics, early on, often depicted the color and form of walls of sacred structures that I was visiting. It only made sense to combine the two. From that was born the relationship of found and collected objects in a sculptural setting. My interest in the found symbols of other cultures led me to the discovery or rediscovery of the icons of my own culture. I continued my search and attraction to these objects- in flea markets, small junk shops and even dumpsters and street corners throughout the USA. Some objects are humorous, some spiritual, some sobering, some just beautiful and when combined, evoke varying thoughts and visual memories. Organic, collected, reused, found—restored. Raku Drift Ceramic, Wood Jeffrey Netzer Blunani Clay Farraday Newsome Several years ago, after working for fifteen years using glossy, colorful glazes on my pottery, I wanted a break from color and high gloss. I began using black and white glazes with a low sheen. These new glazes allowed me to incorporate fine sgraffito (scratched drawing) into my brushwork. This allowed the development of further shadows and texture. I also found that working with black and white imagery helped me to more directly enter the place of metaphor and contemplation; to more introspection and greater emotional clarity. After using the black and white palette exclusively for a few years, I started wanting to use some color again, but in a way that was more meaningful for me. I have recently been involved in a series of work that reflect upon the psychologically compelling stories of the Greek characters Persephone and Icarus. Persephone's Pitcher Terra Cotta Persephone’s fate was to spend half the year above ground in the light (and thus spring and summer) and the other half below in darkness (yielding fall and winter), a duality of experience that is perennially compelling. Persephone’s Pitcher considers Persephone’s dark season with images of fertility and the garden on a black glaze underpainting. The form is a full, generous pitcher. Pomegranate imagery is featured. The pomegranate is often associated with Persephone as a fruit that evokes the egg-laden ovaries as well as the bloody, mortal danger of childbirth. The various flowers are references to fertility. Conversely, the images of shells refer to death and remains. This piece reflects on the dualities of life and death as presented by the Persephone story. Richard Nickel Kiang It earthenware, coloured slips Lindsay Oesterritter The discoloration of rooftops, rusting abandoned trucks, wildflowers gathered at the bottom of fence posts, the wrinkles and stride of our elderly, trees after a rain. I am interested in the interaction within our daily environment that is so routine we stop noticing the slow and constant change surrounding us. In particular I am focusing on structures we build and use for outside, like roof shingles, automobiles, and man whole covers, and people or objects we hold dear, like loved ones and memorabilia ; exploring the depth that is created through erosion and wear. In my current work, these are the images and ideas that punctuate my forms and graphics. I primarily work in high fire stoneware and porcelain, firing in atmospheric kilns, using slips, under-glazes, and glazes, layering and counter posing these elements, referencing the patterns and organic subtlety within those patterns that surrounds me I am a potter because I want to participate within these distinctive and fascinating details contributing to the routine subtle progression of the day. The Dorthy Vase Stoneware Jenna Perstlinger I am interested in tradition, nature, architecture, innovation, road trips, literature, and everything else (in no particular order). I worry about the environment, whether the dessert I made looks exactly like the picture in the cookbook, and people who think they have the one right answer. Staircase #21 Clay A combination of geology and architecture, my forms are constructed using thin slabs of leather-hard clay. Each slab is cut into strips, which are then cut to fit and attached with slip to the layer below, slightly offset from the previous strip. The repetitive crystalline structure that emerges is formally interesting, but some primal shadow of ruins, of approaches, of striving, may also be present. Some of the forms create a slight spiral as they move upwards, others echo square or rectangular shapes, and yet others follow gentle curves. Some are built to withstand the heat work of the kiln, others are encouraged to slump during firing. Art is a language. It cannot be translated into English. Art is a primary experience, and its function is to express concepts that are not in the dictionary. So don’t believe everything you read. Sasha Reibstein These sculptures are reflections of life, filled with emotion, passion, disappointment and failure. They reflect the individual in very personal ways - relating to both our biological and psychological natures and the conflicts and commingling of the two. Through the microcosm of the individual, society is reflected. For instance, how people relate to one another - what is kept hidden and what is boldly flaunted. The works extend to still larger issues such as human versus nature, specifically architecture versus biology. I work primarily in clay because of its unique ability to retain traces of its experiences through building and firing. Fissures and fractures weave their way through the work and scars draw elusive maps across its surface. Weight and balance are often deceiving, as some pieces appear to be extremely precarious while others rest heavily on the ground or float weightlessly in the air. These sometimes extend into large sculptural landscapes, which one can physically enter and feel consumed by. A Fluctuating State Stoneware, Bronze, Aluminum I am hyper-aware that everything I make has the potential for failure. It is this vulnerability that makes me work so hard to make the works survive. Like in our lives, the struggle of mere existence leaves wounds, both internal and external. Growth either erases or extends these scars and the results are both disturbing and beautiful. Sometimes internal wounds become the most visible, as growth is either stunted or forced to make room, creating a knot that the body wraps around. This physically manifests itself through the clay reacting to pressure from within, forming around odd shaped bones, altering its growth pattern dramatically. My work is often about making these internal flaws and irregularities visible. We try to hide these imperfections in our lives, feeling embarrassment or shame for their existence and our lack of control. I am interested in showing that the unusual ways that biology and psychology have of manifesting themselves can be quite attractive, enhancing already complicated entities. Beauty is sometimes found in the most obscure places and I want my sculptures to serve as reminders that it still surrounds us in the most unexpected ways. Jeff Reich My newest work relates in vessel form the challenges of balancing relationships, career and family. My thrown, angled, sectioned and recombined forms of teapots , jars and sculptural vessels also reflect the growth and drought patterns found in desert plants. I am intrigued with native natural desertscapes and their relationship to my life. Natural elements I find around me are a big influence in my work. I grew up in Michigan, surrounded by water. Later, when I moved to southern Arizona, I was surrounded by mountains. I try to capture that sense of place in my work with my choices of color. Abstract expressionist color field painting of mid-20th century artists Milton Avery and Arthur Dove also inform my work. I work at my home studio, Indigo Street Pottery, and the Mesa Arts Center with fellow artist and wife Farraday Newsome. We live in the low Sonoran desert in East Mesa, Arizona with my three children, Lauren, Deanna, and Joshua and our excitable golden retriever, Penny. Leaning Jar Series Stoneware Jim Romberg My work is about the stretching of clay around volume, around experience, that contain activities of the heart, mind, soul, and body, directed towards a sense of time, movement and atmosphere: Abstract relations intended to provoke. A vocabulary of clay, color, movement and juxtaposition is assembled first, becoming a set of abstract relations brought into focus and enhanced with the raku process. Elemental elements of geology, texture and the mark of the hand are engaged to present an obviously manipulated object grounded in age old concerns of place, identity and aspiration, situated in a contemporary context. The hope is to create physical and psychological spaces which invite contemplation about the human spirit that go beyond the obvious identifying traits of geography and culture. Temple Jar Raku Donna Rozman After working in clay and making utilitarian, wheel-thrown work for many years, the opportunity for a change in direction has been delightful. My recent work is more about content and expression than about form and function. After my recent travels to Faenza, Italy and San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, I have embraced a different way of working. There is a sensuality that exudes from these cultures rich in spirituality. The thought that spirituality and sensuality are closely connected is the basis for my current work. As I work on wheel-thrown and altered container forms, I add spiritual as well as erotic symbols. The controlled glaze patterns have a Faentine reference but also represent structure and control. Selecting to leave some exposed terra cotta gives the piece a raw, earthy look. The arch form makes reference to architecture as well as the symbol of spirit or religion. I also use floral references which have a very sensuous aspect to them. Working in a more expressive manner is exciting to me. I am interested in the dynamics of opposites that coexist in the world - one depending on the other, pulling and pushing in an effort to find a balance. From the construction of the form to the decorative surface, the idea of opposing forces is clearly a part of my work. As I continue my work, I look forward to the road ahead and am excited about the journey. ?T Hidden Treasure of Knowledge & Truth Terra Cotta, Majolica Porntip Sangvanich Construction and the graphic arts are my main focus. I have been using geometric shapes and patterns to integrate techniques and ideas, while focusing on the simplicity of curved and straight lines, designs and colors. I believe that the pursuit of impeccable craftsmanship lends integrity and honesty to my work. Bellhop Teapot Clay Flash Poupee Porcelain, Ink Tojo Baby Porcelain, Ink Ruth Santee Diffusion of the Individual A consistent underlying presence in the process of my work has been the creation of a larger whole from small intricate parts/drawings; like building a structure brick by brick. The entity or piece is made up of interrelated parts. The process and the content are united in that both address individuality. The process stands as a monument to individuality; a testimonial to an obsession with the completion of a task that offers potentially intangible results. The content resonates the loss of identity in society. Li'l Hitlers Gourds, Acrylic The surface skin of my 3D forms is made up of hundreds of micro-drawn images of infants, rats and dictators tightly squeezed together. Rendered in a cartoon style, the faces lure the viewer into a sense of levity while engaging them with expressions of fear and disbelief. The figures can no longer be seen as individuals, but are diffused and their distinctive idiosyncrasy is scattered, replaced by a distribution of line and pattern. Like the surface of some miniature ocean…… Philosophically the loss of identity of an individual is often deemed for the “Greater Good”; the value of the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Steven Schaeffer Balance Stoneware, Porcelain, Sodafired My work is evidence of my experiences in the natural world. From walks in the woods, to river expeditions, these physical encounters have led me to a greater level of personal consciousness. Understanding my environment is an essential motivation for my creative process. Nature is the didactic arena that I seek. Through my studio work I have realized what these experiences are consciously revealing to me. River trips by boat have led me to many places. These vessels have been the carriers for my integration into the wild, which has allowed me to foster my personal connection with nature. As a result the form of “boat” or “vessel” is the inspiration core of my ideas. I’m intent on creating work that offers the notion of hope and the embodiment of strength. This is a direct response to nature itself and the risks that are inherent within it. Nature is a collection of many of the formal qualities that interest me and in turn influence my work. My work is simple in its method, yet transfers a generosity of scale to the viewer. The forms define space, and their weight is connected to the landscape they are inspired by. Within these works an entire canyon can be created with one line slicing through its surface. My work is about the spatial relationships I’ve experienced in nature and, in turn, the work has become a voice for those landscapes. Keith Schneider The lidded vessel I have included in this exhibition is a figurative teapot entitled "Mr. Congeniality". The ceramic figure, with its rich and varied history, has been a great source of inspiration for me. By taking liberties with abstracting, exaggerating, synthesizing and stylizing as I see necessary for each of my pieces, I attempt to create individual “characters” that, through gesture, facial expression, color, and texture, possess their own unusual personalities and evoke their own particular emotions. I like using the idea of the figure as a thematic point of departure because it allows for such a broad range of interpretation and can be approached from so many different directions. This piece is constructed from low-fire clay and fired to cone 03. Surface color is developed with underglazes, glazes, and stains. I begin my pieces with a wide variety of wheel thrown forms and begin putting them together in combination with other elements, sometimes extruded pieces, sometimes press-molded or handbuilt. During this process, I try not to be too cerebral, but instead, attempt to react directly to what is visually in front of me and trust my instincts. Often, as I am working, these pieces take on a life of their own and it is interesting to me that some of my characters seem anxious and overwhelmed, some worried and perplexed, some quizzical and amused. As I live with these characters, I believe that they speak to me about myself. Mr. Congeniality Ceramic Marty Shuter Sideways Head Ceramick, Wood Jinsoo Song My work is born amidst the struggle between the bodily drives and my attempt to transcend the body. Ordinary domestic items are transformed into symbolic objects in my work. With my touch, the mundane becomes the manifestation of lust, fear, disgust, pain, and death. The ritualistic act of creating has become a way of overcoming my desire and fear. These objects serve to evoke a sense of disillusionment, a second look at the reality as we know it. Purging Porcelain, Epoxy Chris Theiss Someone recently asked me what I thought my greatest strength was as an artist. My immediate answer was my drawing, but after thinking it over for a while I realized that technical virtuosity in general is my greatest asset, but is also is the biggest detriment to my work. The seduction of skill can easily overwhelm an otherwise interesting idea. Well-honed skills however impressive are not by themselves very interesting. From the time I was small child I was able to draw or make things that could elicit oos and ahs from friends and family. Encouraging, as that was for myself as a little aspiring artist it offered me little constructive input as an adult with serious artistic ambitions. My ceramic sculpture is complicated. It combines my need to construct three-dimensional forms with my love of two dimensional mark making. The morphing of drawing and sculpture has been an objective of mine since becoming a ceramicist. I slab construct primarily but branch out into other methods of hand building when necessary. By using a bright white clay body and a black vitreous slip I maintain a monochromatic pallet and can achieve a wide range of value using the sgraffito technique. All my clay objects are once fired at the mid temperature range. By imposing these few limitations on my work I am able to focus my thoughts on the paradoxical nature of three-dimensional drawing. My recent ceramics are diminutive in scale and posses more immediacy than works I have made in the past. As a result I often refer to these pieces as sketches. A Little Askew Ceramic, Vitreous Slip Personal places are my subject matter. These familiar spaces that surround me in the present and resonate in my memory are deconstructed and then reconstructed into new forms. If I had to describe my objects using one word it would be “reconstructions”. This term may seem clinical but it is well suited to my general concept. Within these spaces I also include the utilitarian and decorative objects that I intimately connect with on a daily basis. Chairs, lamps, bowls, etc., are the details that bring the viewer up close to the work. By controlling this physical distance I establish an intimate connection between the viewer and the object. Creating representational space in a form that is meant to be experienced in the round poses great challenges. There always seem to be vantage points where the perspective may be exaggerated but still makes a certain amount of sense. The transitions between these points are the more difficult areas but are essential to whether or not the piece has a visual flow. Kevin Waller Grain silos, storage tanks and water towers have always interested me. The way they jut from their surroundings catches my attention. I incorporate the atmosphere that surrounds these industrial monuments into my work. My pieces are slipcast using various shapes that I either make or find; then they are altered and assembled. Some of my pieces are made from up to ten different molds. The forms themselves are the most important aspects of the pieces. The “pipe” spouts and handles suggest a close-up look at an industrial object, but the body begs a more distant perspective. After the pieces are bisque fired, I apply underglazes and then an engobe or glaze wash, and fire them to cone 10. The surfaces are purposely mottled to give the pieces a weathered appearance. The colors and patterns are chosen to reinforce the form. The completed work is an interpretation of the industrial environment and it’s surrounding landscape. Red and Green Tower Stoneware Jenchi Wu The overall perception of ceramics outside of the art environment is one of craft, function and utility. This is, of course, due largely in part to the medium’s functional and utilitarian roots. Artists like Peter Voulkos made great progress in dispelling this preconception but I believe a continued focus and emphasis must continue in order for the medium to be fully recognized as a true artistic medium. Ceramics is a medium like any other whether it’s pencil, paint, or stone. It is no more or no less an artistic medium than any other. Ultimately it is the individual artist whose vision dictates how a medium is used. Thrust Stoneware Central to the role of ceramics as a contemporary art form is the thought process one must instill in their work – whether it is a functional vessel or a conceptual art installation. As an example, my art challenges and provokes people to look at ceramics in a different way. I present the medium in a way that challenges their notions and preconceptions. In my current work I focus on the physical properties of clay; how gravity as well as my own force on it affect the medium. I create massive cubes constructed with over 200 wheel thrown vessels that were then deconstructed and assembled to create the cube. I am able to tie the traditional with the contemporary by combining the traditionally thrown vessel with the purest of minimalist forms, the cube. It is through this type of thought process that I believe artists can continue to present ceramics as not only a medium that dispels preconceptions but also excels as a contemporary artistic medium. Set #1 Stoneware Srboohie Abajian Art is not a matter of painting something to the last detail. It is a matter of expressing the state, emotions, and thoughts of one's subject. True art expresses life as a whole, and it is more alive and moving than life itself. Being an artist means seeing the world in a new way and expressing one’s own philosophy of life. A wealth of technique is worthless in itself. Technique must serve one's intended meaning. And meaning must originate from life. My goal is to make simple and emotional art. In my work I endeavor to capture the mood and character of my subjects primarily through the element of Line. I prefer the medium of monotype for its uniquely expressive and emotional quality of Line. I custom-texture my papers using a unique oil-in-water technique. Onto these papers, I draw the primary subjects of my work, using a monotype method. I then may add lights and shadows to the monotypes, using a similar oil-in-water technique, and finally, assemble these monotypes into a collage on the canvas. Rainy Mood of February Mixed Irene Abraham Chromic Shadow Acrylic on Duralene Invasion Acrylic on Duralene My drawings explore the interactions and possibilities when inks and acrylic paints hit Dura-lene. The images are a collaboration of my intent with the physical properties of gravity, diffusion, viscosity and sedimentation. This creates somewhat unpredictable and irregular effects that become the basis for the final image. The drawings are further manipulated to accentuate an interface between abstraction and representation. This combination of uncontrolled and controlled processes opens a discourse on the intersection of the relentless biological and scientific forces that shape our environment. Ken Aldridge I create contemporary paintings and drawings in oil, acrylic, and pen/ink that draw the viewer in and rewards them for their perception. The paintings and drawings are generally of a medium size, being from 16x20 up to 30x40. I have realist pieces as well as work that mixes elements from Realism, Surreal, Impressionistic, Abstract, and Figurative. I seek to find the greatest expression of humanity in each of my pieces. My work is a tribute to the people and places that have inspired me over the years. I see drawing and painting as entertainment for the viewer. If the viewer can be briefly taken away from their thoughts by looking into one of my works, then I have done my job. In addition, my musician portraits are intended to give the viewer an insight into who these great musicians are, as well as give them a glimpse into the elation and occasional struggle involved when creating music. My drawings and paintings are collected by and intended for a discriminating audience. They are for those who like to be on the inside track when something new and exciting is emerging. From previous showings, I've seen anyone from 8 to 80 years old enjoying my work. Coltrane Pen & Ink Richard Ash III American Icon S/S The Stock Broker S/S These prints represent a renewed interest in the collaging and layering of imagery. They are the direct result of a body of work begun as monotypes and expanded upon through Solar Plate Etchings, and finally as screenprints. The three prints are based on numerous themes including newspaper comic characters, Spuds McKenzie, the Budweiser dog, things that explode, correspondence, the stock market, and an overly active imagination. I see the prints as being about memory, both personal and cultural. Leapin Lizard S/S Lauren Avi From a normal, respectful viewing distance, imagery that's compelling on an archetypal level is already apparent in the dictionary pages of Lauren Ari. The subconscious mind recognizes the round indentations on the page edges and the justified columnar text as a dictionary even before the conscious mind grasps the realization. The conscious mind is likely to be attracted first by the brightness and variation of colors from piece to piece, and second by the strange scenes depicted in the confident lines of the artist.It also becomes clear that the dictionary is very old, a ninety-year-old Funk and Wagnell's, and that the bible-paper pages are placed together in fours. Lauren Ari paints a field of color over the pages, but allows specific words and images to jump to the foreground. These are interwoven with overpainting to create whimsical, strange, engrossing studies of language, learning, and the definitions of this reality. An interesting aspect of the work is that its mode of being contemporary includes in a concrete way the beginning of the twentieth century in its reflections on the beginning of the twenty-first.You may view images of the work at www.Klaudiamarrgallery.com and Laurenari.com. Go To Clay Object Jesus Barraza Our medium is the political poster, pieces that reflect national and international grassroots struggles, and tell a history of social justice through graphics. There has never been a movement for social change without the arts – posters in particular – being central to that movement. We are inspired and informed by the stylistic and radical impact of Chicano painters and printmakers of the 1960’s. Like these old-school artistas, our work reflects a growing national consciousness that speaks to the contemporary urban barrios, rebelling against racism, classism, sexism and corporate irresponsibility. We employ the silkscreen format because it is a medium that is inexpensive and accessible, a medium that has been used by various movements in history to make radical posters. Dia de Los Muertos S/S We believe that it is our role as community artists is to define and create a revolutionary culture. To undermine the deeply-embedded sickness of this country that has a terrible history of crushing communities of color. With our art and our voice, we can build something transformative. We are in a time when our country, the strongest empire on the planet, is acting completely against the interests of the global community. Now more than ever, our protest culture is being co-opted by the mainstream corporate media. Counterculture is in style! But the requirement of study, political debate and community empowerment is absent. Power has never been conceded to communities of color, it has been fought for. As artists of the people, we have a responsibility to expose our community’s reality and to tell the history of our people. Sobrevniendo S/S Sandra Beard Music, poetry, the daily news, the spiritual elements of life, all come into play at some point to influence my selection of materials. A painting or print may begin with a color but at some point an undercurrent of memory and emotion take over and direct the choice. I feel that the resulting image is a link to understanding a unique language, one that conveys meaning through layers of lines and colors. I have learned to trust the process and let the image grow. There is often an underlying structure - an ongoing search for order. In printing, monotype images often lead to sequence. The metamorphosis appeals to me and the variables are often a catalyst to explore other directions. Likewise Mono Wanda Becker “Walking Trees” is a dream of the New Mexico forests of the early twentieth century which were depleted during the Depression andWorld War II era. It also deals with our recent struggles with fire and insects. This piece is about a continuing, quiet and almost unnoticed ecological disaster. Walking Trees Ink, Collage Ann Bingham Freeman I love drawing and print making. I had the great good fortune to be able to work with Jim Lorigan at Watermark Press. We were able to use large plates enabling me to express my love for the body as metaphor. Magnesium Etch Pamela Blotner My work has always been concerned with mythology and belief and where they intersect with human experience. Having had the opportunity to travel widely, I’ve been able, first hand, to study the religions and folklore of numerous countries and cultures. My sculptures and drawings explore humanity’s relationship with the gods, with tradition, with science and nature through symbolic forms and functional objects, such as ceremonial articles, vessels, tools used for cultivation (spades, trowels, plows), toys and animals. I am also interested in stories, folk stories, urban stories and the wisdom that is passed down from one generation to the next, textured by landscape, heritage, and belief, that shapes and maintain a culture and ensures its continued survival. Broken Ark 2 Gouache, Mixed Tonia Bonnell “There is unquestionable evidence that the formation of everything we see is governed by that which we now cannot.” Lawrence Krauss Absence Chin, Colle Drawn to natural occurrences like snow falling, storms developing, and dust particles floating, I rely on my surrounding environment (in terms of landscape, climate, and weather) for initial inspiration in creating my images. These visually accessible occurrences, which consist of individual parts forming a mass, act as a bridge, leading me to consider spaces less tangible and more overlooked. In our everyday lives we breathe air and pass through perceived empty spaces, rarely considering our dependence upon the realm of the unseen. Spaces that seem empty are overlooked, not only because human eyes cannot see what fills them, but also because of their constancy. (Unless we experience drastic changes as in altitude, we rarely consider the amount of oxygen we take in with each breath.) When change is not evident, we allow a veil of normalcy to prevent us from noticing basic elements of life. Human range of visibility does not allow us to see the molecules, atoms, and microscopic particles that form our perceptible world. Even the vacuum, as explored in quantum theory, is “neither empty nor featureless” but contains both residual energy and a complex structure. Within a fast-paced, “seeing-isbelieving” culture, I attempt to shift the viewer‚s focus toward the powerful presence of quiet, breathing, real spaces that allow for our being. Drawing repetitive marks, I engage in a focused activity that is reflected in the meditative nature of the finished pieces. Each “particle” is quiet, yet clearly and deliberately stated through the graphic characteristic of the mark. I appreciate the clarity that the lines of early printmaking techniques (engraving, etching, woodcut) provide, and I use them, not traditionally (to form an illusion of a recognizable image), but to achieve the most basic mark: a short, straight line. By limiting my means of expression, I‚m able to investigate the dynamic capabilities of the seemingly simple marks that, like notes of music, gain complexity when composed. In terms of movement and stillness, the visual experiences of my works vary, as fog differs from a blizzard or hailstorm. The scale of each image relates to the size of mark that most suits the medium: etching allows for minute, precise detail; engraving provides a “characteristic hair-thin line,” and the nature of wood demands a larger tool and more aggressive force to cut. Shifts in scale allow for different experiences, whether intimate or enveloping. Within each series, the density, sparseness, value, and directional movement become crucial to the psychological effect. Essential to all pieces is the shift that happens when the viewer approaches the work. While I work from part to whole, the viewer experiences the work from the whole (an atmospheric image) to the part (a recognition of individual marks.) A phase transition, like water forming into ice, occurs within the viewer‚s perception when approaching the work: atmospheric fields crystallize. 1 Lawrence Krauss, The Fifth Essence (New York: Basic Books, 1989), xv. 2 B Alan Wallace, Choosing Reality: A Contemplative View of Physics and the Mind (Boston: Shambhala Publications, 1989), 10. 3 Edward R. Tufte, The Visual Display of Quantitative Information (Cheshire, CT: Graphics Press, 2001), 185. Joy Broom I’m interested in layering in terms of both image and concept. Cropped Italian Renaissance art laser prints form the base over which I’ve added intuitive ballpoint and white gel pen drawings, each page dictating its own imagery. Here are layered elements of nature: seeds, trees, cells, body parts, insects and energy spheres. Individually, these drawing pages are dipped in purified beeswax to seal, protect, bind and objectify. Their wax mounting on panel establishes new visual relationships, playing off each other as small meditations. They refer to history as part of a wider natural universe. Virgins Beeswax, Ball Point Pen on Print Jane Burgunder I have been influenced by my experiences teaching children’s art—the innocence, exuberance (children’s tongues hang out when they’re working) and primitive qualities. My drawings explore simple patterns and formal figure/ ground relationships. The drawing’s process is revealed through additive and subtractive layers. Meaning is derived through this process—a collection of physical decisions made whole. The image’s end is imprecise—striving for unexpected or eccentric relationships. Gatepost Mono Kim Cheselka In my daily life I collect, select and then record images, creating narrative environments for them to live in. A volcano, a coffee cup, a house… depictions or representations of familiar icons find their way into paintings, drawings and three dimensional boxes. Clear Affection India Ink, Watercolor By creating these environments, I invite the viewer to connect to their own experience. Mark Collop Graphite and paper have recently become an important material in my work. My renewed interest in this media emerged from teaching beginning drawing at the university. Similarly, the Xerox machine, used daily to make copies for my students, is now a tool used in my work. It is exactly this type exchange between life, art and technology that is the catalyst of my investigation. Visually, I want to re-present the interconnection of the whole and blur the lines of demarcation. Biomechanic Noon Graphite, Oil, Xerox Transfer Biomechanic Sunrise Graphite, Oil, Xerox Transfer Stacy Elko Living in Morocco there was a way of being that was not noticed in my mind and body until I left. I began to understand difference and change. The tidal force of the place was a wave that engulfed me and changed me in ways I never thought possible. After spending many years overseas in Morocco, I returned to this country with the perception that I was the same person who had left. But instead realized that I had been on an incredible journey both physically and mentally. I had been living in Morocco for the 10 years and despite the fact that I came back to the US, I continued to make art about Morocco as if I had never left. Later I began to artistically investigate a pervasive feeling that had been growing since I had come back to the US. I began searching out places that were in tune with the feeling: Rail yards to the south and west of town, abandoned places slowly being reclaimed by nature. A crow image insinuated itself into my work, a crow that I had stumbled upon, dead on the grass. Taking up many pages in my workbook, I began to approach the prints as pages in a very large sketchbook. I continued to work with the crow imagery concentrating on the claws and a heart image and later manifesting it in terms of other things related to me in special ways: fragile teacups, peppers, and acorns. I defined this as displacement /fragmentation. I began to think of my life before, during and after Morocco as a journey. Crow and Heart Litho, Pastel There is an ancient sacredness to the journey. The individual turns his back on that which is known and walks forward. The beginning of the journey is often unannounced, unrealized until future reflection. And upon this journey, there are points of stopping--- places of significance. The purpose to the journey manifested in these places. This artist statement does not have any final summary since I never feel that I am at the end of something, that I am constantly falling down an endless well of exploration and discovery. Thank you. Kevin Evans My imagery is a concoction of influence from the natural concealed world, instinct, and the cavernous depths of imagination. The process is a provoking push and pull journey within medium and self, sporadic introductions of chaos to ensure an unpredictable voyage towards the concluding outcome. When working, I investigate the interior terrain, favoring an existence within a silent emblematic space. I deposit symbols, characters and texture -following an intuitive voice leading to unanticipated and surprising consequences. The picture first begins as a sequence of visual ramblings in sketchbook. Intermittently, unsystematic rudiments and marks of disorder are introduced. on occasion, regions are destroyed or erased and act as a reaction trigger. It’s a procedure to briefly exist within an atmosphere of disorder and unpredictability. When the illustration has attained a conclusion, it is then transferred to a photosensitive plate and printed in an intaglio technique. Debeo Intaglio Betty Field Haley Early in my career as a painter, I discovered the qualities and aesthetics of Chinese classical painting to be most in line with my own aspirations as an artist. I have admired ancient Chinese philosophies of landscape painting, and my aim continues to be to express, "the circulation of the Spirit (Chi) produces movement of life". I am fascinated with trying to be an instrument to communicate the power and majesty of life. Although experienced in a variety of media, I find ink and watercolor the most rewarding for expression as a painter. Watercolor and ink are difficult to control and yet I feel that is part of their glory. I find the unpredictability offers suggestions, stimulates the imagination, and allows real creation to happen spontaneously. I have always been a painter who works in the outdoors and I draw great inspiration from natural forms. I paint what I see but not as a strict realist, and prefer suggestion to fine detail as I seek to discover Ultimate Reality found in Nature. One of my favorite themes is of deep mountain chasms with waterfalls, exploring rocky formations and pouring water. I admire the treatment of space in Chinese art, and the concept that sometimes one can say more with less. The mistiness of atmospheric perspective, empty spaces, and mere suggestion of natural forms in many of my later works, are testament to this influence. I enjoy playing with inventive and multiple variations of colors, enhancing space and form yet always attempting to retain an original harmony. Over the years, a development that stands out is the increase in the size of my painting. Although unusual for a watercolorist, I am most happy painting in very large dimensions. I continue to deepen my understanding of ancient Chinese painting and blend tradition with modernity. I feel I have developed a painting style that retains much of the Chinese aesthetic concerns, yet in a new way, especially in ink painting. High Mountains with Figures Chinese Ink, Watercolor Kathi Flood "What Bad Drivers Are Thinking" is a series of 12 washboards that reflects the universal frustration we all feel on the road. I have commuted down Ventura Boulevard in the San Fernando Valley for most of my life, so my guerrilla sociology is well rehearsed on this issue. I took two hundred photos of cars and businesses, created drawings from the photos on handmade papers, and went to a car junkyard for bits of auto findings. My work often documents urban frustrations in a humorous way because I can get better attention and reflection with hyperbole and random goofyness than with bitter rantings. As the years go by and I observe traffic thickening, I feel compelled to address the psychological implications of urban population density. Bad Drivers Drawing Collage Suzanne Fontaine Boundaries interest me. They imply continuum. I work a single idea across many media. Both product and process embody continuum. The creation of space with color and the effects of repetition are two consistent concerns. I am interested in the relationship between structure and meaning, the brain’s predisposition to seek, find, and interpret pattern. My background in poetry, linguistics, and intercultural communications influences my art. Cognitively, the brain creates categories to process information. The category boundaries are arbitrary. Yet, it is to these categories that an individual assigns meaning. A continuum of information, with its idiosyncratic map of categories, constitutes an individual’s reality. The continuum is dynamic, perpetually in flux. Boundaries continually shift according to perception and conception, as perception and conception shift according to boundary delineation. My work explores this dialectic—how structure allows meaning to be manifested, and vice versa Steve Gibson The progression of my work has taken many turns as I have developed as an artist. Perceptions and thoughts become reality and develop into nonlinear narratives. Looking at historical and contemporary events and trying to respond to them, I am entranced by the connections. Seemingly unrelated events and images connect in the Diaspora. Untitled 100 Aqua, Etch, Chin Colle I do not try to make too much sense of the experience but rather respond intuitively to the nuances I find there. Simplifying, editing and honing my response become most helpful in clarifying the work. I try to connect the concept and craftsmanship in a manner that is straight forward and poetic. Untitled 101 Aqua, Etch, Chin Colle Untitled 102 Aqua, Etch, Chin Colle Carole Greer Red Dot and Circle The catalysts for making my images Are circumstances in life were control often is taken away, An experience we all share. Circles confine. The Rose and the Star are symbols that have represented My personality and character Dress patterns while not used here are Hinted at by the use of the red dart on the left. The spatial field remains ambiguous. Forms move against one another, They struggle. Red Dot and Circle Paint Stick Gail Gwinn Saint Goldy and In the Woods are included in my ongoing series, Light Through the Trees. Our northwest winters are notorious for short, dreary days when the sun seems barely able to cut across even a corner of the sky. To keep sane, I try to focus on what light there is, whether it’s the first ray of sunrise, midday light filtering through trees or simply a porch lamp illuminating a long night. In the Woods Etch Saint Goldy Etch Dirk Hagner In my art old and new techniques and ideas compliment each other. Working in new directions, I constantly find myself drawing historic, geographic, political and artistic connections to the past. Written Landscape Letterpress Art Hazelwood After it became clear that nothing would stop the US march to war in Iraq, and my frustration and powerlessness mounted the only course that seemed open was to channel despair into small concise statements. Engraving is a method of cutting the copper, brass or zinc plate with tools to create an image. It is a laborious process and one I taught myself during this project. The minuteness, obsessiveness and control required were the perfect match for my mood of focusing anger at a particular detail of the monumentally hubristic government that the US has become under this administration. Liberty Brought to Baghdad Engraving I did not presume to portray the photographic reality of the war nor the horrors of wars. I focused instead on the metaphorical and satirical nature of the enterprise. Liberty Brought to Baghdad portrays a bound and blindfolded lady liberty, roughly treated by troops who are dragging her off to her newly intended. Nicole Henderson Of all the different artistic media, I have found printmaking to be the most versatile and personally rewarding. I prefer to work in abstract terms, and often layer several images to get the desired effect. My first love is etching, but other processes are represented in my work as well. Sometimes I start with a vague idea, but ultimately my art is determined by the subconscious. Deregulation II combines two images from etched plates. On seeing the finished image, I recognized my own growing frustration of environmental policies. Chaos and destruction are the results of deregulation. Deregulation 2 Intaglio Judy Hiramoto Journalists consider the bombing of Hiroshima the most newsworthy event of the twentieth century. Ironically, after winning World War II America began an undeclared war on its own citizens and relentlessly tested bombs in Nevada spreading fallout over its own people and exposing soldiers and laboratory employees to radiation. I work as an archeologist in this series, excavating quotes and images from the twentieth century to exemplify what a bizarre culture we have become. Imagery and text are placed in other systems such as science, language, and music notation to create associations between seemingly disparate systems to explore how meaning is construed. I began the nuclear issues series in 1995 to commemorate fifty years of the nuclear age. Home On The Range inkjet Richard Hutter Floral still life has been the primary theme in my work since 1993. Instead of a representational approach, however, I prefer an abstracted, “architectonic” view of my subject. I paint on constructions made of found wood and panels made of new wood (usually birch), sometimes using techniques borrowed from printmaking. I also create works on paper, including self-published prints. I create imagery by drawing with architects’ tools (such as a french curve) and by collaging found elements from old books, magazines, postcards, and the like. I frequently use images from early 20th century books on mechanical drawing and engineering (a personal connection to my late father, about stories of paths not taken.) Formal concerns predominate over symbolic or emotional ones, informed by Minimalism and Pop, with a nod to Dada. Tactility and an obsession with surface are evident in all my work: encausticlike waxy acrylic paint on found-wood constructions; sticky and mottled passages on lithographic monotypes; and matte and almost-porous-looking surfaces on found-paper collages. Trine S/S This ongoing body of work dealing with the flower form has evolved slowly over the years. Initially there were gridded, tiled photo-collages of blurry photos of flowers and vegetation. Later I began using a 4-lobed shape, which had emerged in my sketchbook while I was researching Japanese popular culture for an unrelated project. With this 4-lobed shape I have created varied explorations in abstraction of the flower form over several years: by repetition, by enlargement, by fragmentation, by slivering into a shadow of itself, by tipping patterns back into perspective space to suggest landscape, among others. More recently I began using found diagrams and photos of gears and other mechanical parts to suggest floral still life. Another recent development is a new form resembling a beehive—which itself refers to an evolution of a flower’s essence—but is actually proportioned on the spires of the shrines at Angkor Wat in Kampuchea, and so re-connects my work to architectural ideas. More recent still is my discovery of the wonders of vintage floral wallpaper, which I have begun incorporating as an element using collage techniques. Also new is a form resembling a comma or apostrophe that is actually informed by the paisley shape, which I found during my hunt for old wallpaper. In my sketchbook the paisley shape slowly morphed into this stylized, comma-shape form. A visitor to my studio remarked that the form adds a reference to language in my floral abstractions. A few notable influences on my work are my training as a printmaker, my love of architecture and the built environment (which began during my boyhood in Chicago) and my appreciation of ephemera or anything old and printed. Artists whose work I respond most strongly to include Donald Sultan, Andy Warhol, Agnes Martin and Joseph Cornell. Eunice Kim There is in me, a need and desire to counteract extremes of order and chaos. I consciously and deliberately introduce randomness into order. Likewise, I find and extract structure from chaos. The result, is balance. This balance is not static. It is constantly moving, gauging, and readjusting. Depending on the point of departure, it can be found anywhere within the full spectrum of order and chaos. Balance for me is achieved not through grand gestures, but through small, nuanced acts that are alive with awareness. My recent work, the Porous series, and the processes employed to generate them, mirror and document this ongoing search for balance. Porous #18 Collograph,Chin Colle Porous #18 Collograph,Chin Colle Machiko Kondo I am concerned about the quality of being human and human nature. We may refer to good and bad traits of others. All of us have both, benevolence and malevolence. The mental motion swings between the artless and the artful, the optimistic and the pessimistic, the rational and the irrational, the straight and the cynical, and the warm and the cold. All things are in a state of flux. Everything is constantly changing. I sometimes like to gaze the continuous exhaustion and the extinction under individual delusions and passions. Songs of Amusement Acrylic, Charcoal, Ink, Pastel, Lino Japanese word, “mono no aware” means something like “beauty tinged with sadness”. Life is too uncertain and transient; however, we feel the pathos of things and appreciate the beauty of nature. My work often originates from this sense of “mono no aware”. We have paradoxes. Pamela Lanza Each of us learned in his own way that his imagination had been dwarfed, looked up and saw the power of which he had been proud loom over us, civilization face to face with its own implications: industrial ruin gagged outrage imagination incarceration magnetically resonant war machines force-fed televised anesthesia holy ozone bombardment morally vaccinated remote-control consciousness stress-related Buddhism post-industrial prayer muzzled prophets unbound The World Tries Its Weight Ink, Acrylic, Collage breaking out of artifice survival of a joyful noise particulate angelic net of breathing ones web of fragile matter defiant soaring souls a thousand dancers on the head of a pin and civilization asks of both spirit and ruin: “Is you is or is you ain’t my baby?” (beginning and end quoted from Jacob Bronwoski) Anthony Lazorko Technically, this print is an attempt to push wood as far as I can in defining a visual idea, in plastic terms. The content side is about defining a facet of American life. The Eat-Rite diner is located down the street from Busch Stadium in St. Louis. It is open 24 hours a day, everyday, for the tired and hungry or anyone who could use a hot cup of coffee and some conversation. The counter at Eat-Rite barely holds eight people, huddled around the grill and coffee pots. This area of St. Louis, near the Mississippi, can get very dark, damp and cold during the winter months. The "Eat-Rite" sign is a beacon in the night when everything else is closed. It glows in the dark with its offering of warmth and camaraderie. (This is not a Mickey Ds!) Eat Rite at Nite Woodcut John Oliver Lewis White Feld Relief, Enamel on Paper Ann Lindbeck I think of my work as visual haikus. Haikus are Japanese poems consisting of 17 syllables arranged in a sequence of 5-7-5 Haiku poems evoke a sense of place or a time; they are not descriptions. In my work I strive to suggest, rather than display, a memory, a season, or a place. I use layers of textures and tones, creating ambiguous spaces, using ordering forms to maintain a calm, a repose. Haikus are enigmatic and intimate. The short, strict form makes a full narrative impossible. My prints, like the poems, are not about storytelling, but about the memory of a moment, or the fleeting glimpse, or reflections on a place. Fusuma 7 Monoprint Justin Lorenzen In 1999, music gave birth to one man. Since 2002, I have devoted myself to transposing the auditory signal into a visual record of this individual’s struggle for survival. It may be a story you have already heard or a story yet to be written. In either case, it is a fantastic adventure into the purest forms of black and white and the experimental realm inbetween. It is a mysterious domain of juncture where we will find not just the tale of one man, but the legends of many; the chronicles of Dr. Frank Electrostein. Electrocution Linocut The story of Dr. Frank Electrostein is compiled into a seventeen-part print book. Each individual print is a linoleum relief cut and is hand-pressed onto paper. I have always enjoyed the challenge of working with only positive and negative space; with this project, I have created a continuous narrative through visual format of multiple prints. The images are all inspired through a process of sequential listening of compilation music. Each song gives birth to a new frame in the storyboard of Dr. Electrostein’s life. Printmaking is a timeless method of art. It is an excellent medium of narration and can explain a message to the masses. So as long as the music feeds my ears, my hands will feed the world’s eyes with the story of Dr. Frank Electrostein’s persistent existence through this print project. Infiltrate Linocut Enrica Marshall The Printmaking Umbrella is diverse and, with that, and it's innovativeness and continuous challenges has made me a 30 year printmaker of varied mediums. Being from Africa I often use my growing up experiences in my work. At the River Screen Print Katherine Mc Guinness There are no colors like the colors that lithography inks can make. The brights, the intensives, don't jump out at the viewer, but draw one in like the glow from a bed of coals. These colors feed my very motivation to make art. Katherine Mc Guinness Quoting the Artist Diane Mc Leod My art is arranged in resonating configurations with a focus on line and color to maximize expressive impact. I strive to make my art original and true to myself. It is an energetic response to my subconscious, to spiritual and intuitive inspiration and to the natural world. I express those responses without premeditation, allowing lines and colors to emerge freely and repetitiously. High visual impact is my intention with these abstract expressions of my imagination. Dabbled Wave Monoprint The materials employed facilitate my spontaneity, as well as my drive for visual, emotive and interpretative complexity. Drawing and printmaking are the media most adaptable to this way of working. Lithography, monotypes and drawing inks are my preferred materials. With them I give direct expression to joy, anguish, humor or outrage. I use layering to create depth, visual and intellectual. This is particularly true of the prints, where I often print several different plates in registration, or add to a monotype image in many consecutive runs. I seek to satisfy my enjoyment of problem-solving through art. Creating art is very freeing, enjoyable and healing. The length of time it takes to complete each image allows me to engage with it meditatively and playfully. Making art allows me to express my connection with all creation, my respect for it, and my gratitude to be a part of this eternal, ever-changing place. J C Muhs Except when I draw directly from nature, since I am not an illustrator, I have no idea where my images come from, I merely allow them to appear! Chinese Soldier & Tibetan Snow Lion Coloured Pencil Karen Neubert Los Angeles is one of a series of landscapes of the 134 Freeway. An ordinary driving moment … sunset…the clouds lift after days of rain…and, as Jonathan Safran Foer writes, “Everything is illuminated…” The monotype was printed on Somerset black on the etching press at the Armory Center fo the Arts, and further developed with pastel. Los Angeles Monoprint, Pastel James Pace 1.Emblems of dissent. Employing mechanisms of physiological response and culturally contextualized references furthering societal debate. 2.A cultural alarm.Regarding the dangers of mainstream submission, and the subsequent loss of liberties. 3.Aesthetically, pivoting off of traditions of nationalistic banners, flags and political posters intended to inspire patriotism. 4.Compilations of propaganda, both positive and negative, which tap into archetypes and icons provoking our collective memory of history. 5.Complex diversifications juxtaposed with austere singularity, which in turn, breeds a clearer definition of both. [bureaucracy + individual = social agreement, mainstream < importance of tolerance]. 6.Contextual variables determine the ultimate interpretation. Mr. Brink Intaglio Political Labyrinth Intaglio Rie Palkovic We are more alike than we are different.” As I worked on this watercolor, I clearly saw how true this statement was. The familiar is often comforting when we feel displaced and I returned to the flora and fauna of the tropics where I was raised. The tropical fruit bat is as comforting a sight to me as cats and dogs. While walking at night I saw them often swoop down in flight to capture fruit for their meal. They are also a source of fear to many who are not as familiar with them. The comforting as a source of fear is a paradox that I am investigating in my study of nature. To see the multiple sides of an issue or a person can help us to see that, “we are more alike than we are different”. Now Do You See Watercolour on Layout Paper Sarah Pavsner My visual vocabulary derived from textural facades of factories, and abandoned warehouses in my home town of Detroit Michigan. A camera and the darkroom were tools I used to show the juxtaposition between the humanity that once inhabited these structures and the force of nature, which despite the absence of people continues to live and reshape these soon to be ruins. I continued the exploration of industry and how it relates to the environment as a college student at the University of South Carolina by photographing the forgotten cotton mills and clay factories. Upon my graduation from the Department of Media Arts I furthered my skills as a photographer for the South Carolina Department of Highways and Public Transportation and its Public Affairs Department. There I focused on the human aspect of visual expression through photojournalism. Horse Monoprint After obtaining my bachelor’s degree, I moved to Washington, D.C. There I worked as an administrator at Arena Stage and Warner Theater. Despite my employment in the theatrical arts, I continued my work in photography and worked as a freelancer in both the public and private sector. Moving to Los Angeles almost a decade ago, provided antonyms for my visual language. Both transition and a landscape that was foreign to my mid west upbringing made it difficult for me to express myself in an artistic manner. My primary block dealt with the decay that appeared to coexist with humanity; both abundant in this city. This was a complete departure from the starkness of the Midwest; and this richness could not be aptly served with traditional photography. By burnishing a plate or adding a new layer of ink to a mono plate, I am replacing photography with a more versatile medium. The versatility inherent in printmaking allows me to show the diversity of both landscape and humanity abundant in Los Angeles. Furthermore, printmaking and its related mediums has empowered me to unleash subconscious aesthetics. These dormant memories are now sources for both conceptual and abstract projects. Rod Replogle Ink and handmade paper have filled one of the artistic needs of artists for thousands of years. Adding colored pencil to the ink work, and then cutting the paper into strips and weaving them into new designs is definitely a newer way of creating images. When two sheets of drawings are combined, some of the visual relationships can be planned; however, some are serendipitous. Remembering a Fast Dance Sumi Ink, Coloured Pencil Wayne Rice Concrete Blonde Monoprint, Hand Coloured The inspiration for my work comes out of my life experiences and personal interests. Some of these interests currently include: color woodblock prints from the Japanese Edo Period, historic Native American textile design, brand images in American popular culture, computerized digital art, symbols in dream psychology, mysticism in world religious traditions, children’s art, and alternative portraiture. I see my work as a combination of many influences and many voices. I do not see myself as a regional artist, although my work is always influenced by where I live, especially by the natural environment. I enjoy creating works in a series. My intention is to communicate an underlying feel of change and evolving relationships. I use metaphors of film animation, parts of books, phases of the moon, or the life cycle of a romance. In titles I often use carefully chosen language to create short narratives, which serve as a passport into my personal visual territory. These narratives distill, encircle andilluminate a subject’s inner life—somewhat like carefully considered notes in a short musical measure. In drawing I use several varied techniques in colored pencil for their simplicity, versatility, and visual brilliance. I create interplays of light and color with texture and pattern to define a visual habitat to combine shorakusai’s dream monoprint, hand coloured Zen Cowgirl monoprint, hand coloured representational and abstract imagery. One on-going series, “Flora and Fauna of the Middle Latitudes,” is a group of works inspired by objects from nature. Most of the works in this series are purposefully small and intimate. These works are imagined as parts of a mysterious collection–possibly hand-colored “book plates” or illuminations discovered in an ancient herbal or old field-book. Possibly they are the surviving pages of an encyclopedia or scriptorium text. The term “middle latitudes” refers to a position in time as well as in geographic location. In monotype printmaking I use several varied techniques for their sheer exuberance and painterly spontaneity. Techniques are often combined to create a base layer of imagery over which additional layers of color, texture, or pattern are added in a variety of other drawing or painting techniques. The addition of other media, such as metallic inks or oil crayon, colored pencil or paint, adds contrast and depth to particular works. One on-going series, “Faces from the Edge of the World,” is a related group of portrait works in monotype printmaking with the addition of hand coloring. These works are portraits of real or imagined subjects whose lives I document as independent spirits in the high desert borderlands of the American southwestern experience. Favianna Rodriguez Our medium is the political poster, pieces that reflect national and international grassroots struggles, and tell a history of social justice through graphics. There has never been a movement for social change without the arts – posters in particular – being central to that movement. We are inspired and informed by the stylistic and radical impact of Chicano painters and printmakers of the 1960’s. Like these old-school artistas, our work reflects a growing national consciousness that speaks to the contemporary urban barrios, rebelling against racism, classism, sexism and corporate irresponsibility. We employ the silkscreen format because it is a medium that is inexpensive and accessible, a medium that has been used by various movements in history to make radical posters. Stop the Evictions Screen Print Thomas Schlotterback Suzanna & The Elders: Hot Tub Honey #1 Charcoal Art is my vehicle for expressing the world that I see. My objective is to present that world and what it does using the disciplined vocabulary, techniques, and materials of the visual arts learned from art historical ancestors who expressed the same elements of their world. Each work I complete is a carefully thought out and studied human condition, circumstance, involvement and enterprise that presents my interpretation in a manner readable by those who may see it. My studies begin with a specific subject matter and trial sketches of compositions that present a depiction of my interpretation of that subject matter. This stage takes time and some of the subjects I deal with continue on for years. I began the initial studies for “Hot Tub Honey No 1:Susanna and the Elders”, some six or seven years ago. The drawing in this exhibition is what I consider a “finished” drawing and was done late in 2003 and shown first in 2004. It is the first of three drawings on the subject. The other two drawings are “Hot Tub Honey No. 2: David and Bathsheba” and “Hot Tub Honey No.3: Potiphar’s Wife and Joseph”. All of my drawings are finished to provide the form from which finished oil paintings will be done. “Hot Tub Honeys, 1, 2, 3” Will provide the visual form for the three oil on canvas panels for a triptych that will be started in the spring of 2006. In this finished triptych I hope to combine an ancient old testament topic with modern manifestations and indicate how while things change there are aspects that are the result of continuous human characteristics, foibles and tendencies. I am flattered and pleased that the jurors for this exhibition responded so positively to this drawing. Katherine Sheehan In a time when the natural world is rapidly shrinking and species are disappearing daily, our attention is urgently required. Close observation is a form of reverence. I believe that the infinite possibilities of nature can be a lens to reveal the spirit. Through mindfulness, the transformation of the consciousness of the viewer becomes a possibility. Enlargement of the senses is the goal of my art. The conceptual and formal qualities of my work support each other through the use of diverse materials.Trained as a printmaker, I work in layers. Images of the natural world are combined with signifiers of the man-made world including architectural elements, navigational systems, scientific diagrams, maps, and pattern. These motifs address my concern about finding a space in which nature and mankind can co-exist. I use the unique handmade mark and images printed in multiples in my investigation of the balance between the natural world and the man-made world. Decorative patterns echo the repetition of forms in nature. Watercolor, sumi ink, Asian papers, beeswax, and pastel all add visual and tactile layers in the pieces. Pastel is an especially appropriate element in my work as it expresses the vivid color, delicacy and fragility of the endangered animals I draw. The sheer unbridled abundance of the natural world can be overwhelming to us, but we are inextricably connected to this order of things, bound by the same universal laws We are not separate from nature. We are nature. My art reminds the viewer of the richness and fragility of the natural world, and the intertwined fate of man and the environment. Mano Ponsderosa Intaglio, S/S, Silver Leaf Mike Stephens Through my work I will investigate my own selfidentity and what my place is within the world.Using an alter-ego figure based upon a graphic comic book style that developed from childhood, I explore the chaotic scenarios that often occur in current society. My art makes a social commentary by utilizing traditional technique combined with current cultural images. Camero Woodcut Thomas Stubbs They don’t Believeth in Evolution: (The Assault On The Other Towers.) Look up “Incompetent Design” on Google. Mars, The Neocon God. Is it the “Rapture they Seeketh, the “Raptorial” (Predatory Creature like an American Eagle), Or Is It Just Plain Old Rape. A Game Of Cat And Mouseketeer. The personification of animals for movies might in a perverse way be a way of expressing anthropocentric views, and is a denial of nature on the level of arrogance of most religious dogmatic doctrines. D Swan Sullivan Purple Tri 1 Sumi Ink, Watercolour, Glitter Purple Tri 2 Sumi Ink, Watercolour, Glitter Purple Tri 3 Sumi Ink, Watercolour, Glitter Creative expression for me is like exercise, an outlet where I process the joy and stress of life. My paintings and drawings are journal entries. They document the residual emotions and responses that build up from my experiences. The images are intuitive and spontaneous where line and color have equal importance. I strive to create hidden details, inspired by the beauty and subtleties I find in nature. The spontaneity and fragility of watercolor assists me to accomplish this. Zolita Sverdlove I have been drawing intensively for 58 years. Most of my ideas for prints and painting are begun as drawings. But frequently, the drawing can stand on its own as a finished artwork without being a precursor to some other medium. Hollywood Hills Ink In my recent work I have been very involved in using black. I used graphite and ink and some white to create the layers of different blacks in Hollywood Hills. This drawing evolved from some quick sketches and photos I took at Barnsdall Municipal Art Gallery. We were having alternating rain showers and sunlight, one of my favorite phenomena to paint. I had always wanted to do this view and the weather conditions were perfect for my sensiblity. For once you could see everything and Griffith Park was not covered in smog. The Observatory and the Hollywood Hills sign were all very clear in front of the turbulent skies. Annette Tosti Trained as a scientist and an artist, for me, art is a way of questioning, of testing the world. I view the world as a system of interdependent parts. Communication is a process that maintains the flow of information. Information acts to keep the system in alignment. So, nodes of information coordinate the flow of communication that surround and connect us. Digital Essence Ink, Brass on Paper Yida Wang My work represents my exploration of self with subject and images from my cross-culture existence. The subjects and images of my work are outgrowth from my personal world, memory and experience. But they were assembled in such a way as to endow the representation with metaphysical significance and to evoke psychological response. Birthmark 1 Charcoal, Hand Print on Scroll Birthmark 2 Charcoal, Hand Print on Scroll Ricky Weisbroth When I was a child I lived in a house in a small town, in “the Projects” in Brooklyn, New York, and on a chicken farm. This assemblage of locale and the experiences intrinsic to each helps to define who I am as a person, a writer and an artist, and is what informs my life and my art. While many people talk about the halcyon days of the 1950s, I grew up in its dark shadow: it was a time of domestic (U.S.) fear and political repression and, for me, personal sadness. I have, of course, carried the foundations laid during my childhood into adulthood. In 1964, yet another Buddhist monk selfimmolated in the streets of New York. I joined the nascent antiVietnam War movement. My opinions have developed and matured over the years, some ideas have been discarded and new concepts embraced, but it is fair to say that I have been active, throughout my life, in attempting to create my version of a better world. Fried Eggs Monoprint I have come to understand that there never will be an end to human desecration: people will continue to have babies they can’t feed, corporations will continue to pillage in the name of consumerism, religious zealots will continue to slaughter in the name of god, animals will continue to suffer in laboratories, on farms, and in the wild in the name of the betterment of mankind. I believe we are on a path of environmental destruction that will not be averted. Sometimes it is quite difficult to get out of bed in the morning. What saves me is creating art. The process is a wellspring of introspection and balance. It is my respite. Occasionally, a person looking at my work will ask me what it “means.” I ask what emotions the work evokes in him/her. It gives me tremendous satisfaction to be able to share with the viewer a similarly involving, meditative and thought-provoking experience. Together, we may not save the world but at least may help each other out of bed to face another day. Mike Youngman Work. Work in the face of opposition. Work in the face of indifference. Work in the face of frustration. Work in the face of doubt. Work in the face of the ludicrous. Work in the face of praise (maybe smile). Work in the face of politics. Work in the face of rules. Work in the face of success (it’s fleeting). Work in the face of the sublime. Laugh. Work. Cold Lunch with Monkey Linocut