Thursday, April 18, 2013
Pictures of Pitchers
This was one of the first salt glazed pitchers I made in grad school. The handle attachment was so weak, so tentative... it is hard to look at now. It was sprayed with a wollastonite slip, then poured the inside with a tenmoku glaze, and then once fired in the salt kiln. I had high hopes that it would turn out this luscious buff yellow. Didnt quite work out.
This pitcher was made for me by Dave Funk. I love the thick salted surface! Rich and melty. Almost like flowing chocolate! Dave's handle attachment was so much more confident than mine, it inspired me to take bigger risks and to really seek out a way of creating handles that were uniquely mine. Took a long while to get there, but I think in the end, they definitely felt very different. I'll have to dig up some of those pitchers from Cold Springs Studio sometime.
Friday, March 22, 2013
More Pots From Our Collection
What I love is how different his current body of work is from this old woodfired stuff. His sensibilities towards the form are still very similar (probably from the KCAI influence)... but the new work speaks volumes of time, practice and stability.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Talking About Body Parts and Clay Bodies
This handbuilt mug was made as a demo for John Neely's beginning handbuilding class. During my third year at Utah State, I began teaching the beginner's handbuilding class. Having spent the bulk of 15 years as a strictly wheel throwing potter, this was quite a change for me. As a way of kick starting my teaching process, I had watched John Neely and Jason Hess as they taught their respective handbuilding classes for nearly two years.
This mug turned out nicely ovoid, with a very nice softened lip. The handle fits sweetly into the hand. The texture and the edge finishing was all done through a bed sheet laid on the soft slab. It is a perfect example of knowing what can be done to the clay at the early soft stages. The seam was beveled while the clay was still wet, allowing the whole form to be completed in one session. For students just beginning to work in soft slabs, this was eye opening. For me... it was the start of me thinking about clay very differently.
One of the most interesting aspects of being in a large graduate program was the exposure to so many different style of working, including many MANY different claybodies. John Neely had been working on a couple different woodfired claybodies that had wondefully bizarre names like Pioneer Day. Usually there was some play on words (or holidays as the case may be), and usually referred to some component of the claybody. Many of these claybodies were designed for a specific type of work or firing style: ie, reduction cool, woodfiring in the Train Kiln, or the salt kiln.
In my second year, I spent the bulk of the year experimenting with glazed surfaces in the salt and soda kilns. I had been trying to find a white stoneware body which would give me some clay body color other than grey in the salt kiln. I wanted a dense white tight clay body which would allow my glazes to show up bright and strong. John made many suggestions and eventually I created this particular body, which used Helmer Kaolin as one of the primary clay components. It was buttery smooth when throwing, took handles well, was very dense when fired. All in all, it was a nice claybody. When I showed my students the claybody, with the forms all flipped over so they could see the wadding marks and flashing on the bottoms of the pots, one student made a comment about the flesh colored quality of the claybody... saying that the bowl looked very flesh, almost breast-like. I chuckled and named the claybody: Neely's Nipple. Mind you, I didn't advertise the claybody this way. But when I saw other students mixing up the claybody later on, I had to laugh just a little.
Labels:
clay,
claybody,
glaze,
grad school,
John Neely,
salt fired pottery,
USU,
Utah
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Gnarly CRUNCH!
Just posting a few more images of the pots I uncovered after unpacking those crates that had been buried on my front porch for the past decade. Considering that this first image is of a whiskey cup (or sake if you prefer) from John Neely, and is quite small, you can tell that the clay is groggy beyond words! It is more like stone or asphalt. Rough and gnarly! This one was fired in a reduction cooling kiln.
This is a woodfired mug, by Jason Hess, woodfirer extraordinaire. This mug came out of a firing where Jason was testing out new wood for the woodkiln. He'd been firing with cottonwood for a while, but the firing crew was seeing weird blue drips on the underside of the kiln shelves post-firing... so they switched to firing scrap wood from this building site... so suddenly there was oak and pine aplenty, which completely changed the color response from the claybody.
Labels:
grad school,
reduction cooled pottery,
USU,
Utah,
woodfired pottery
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Three Pots from Chris Baskin
Chris Baskin was a grad student at Alfred while I was there as a "special student". Chris had apprenticed with Byron Temple, which in my mind, enabled him to walk on water. Having used only a few of Byron's pots, the sensibilities shared are immense.
Whenever I asked Chris if I could sit and watch him pull handles, he always made it seem like "no big deal, handles are easy, no problem"... and I struggled for another five years before I began to find my own handles. Looking back now, I see so many things in Chris' pots that I borrowed or stole outright. I doubt he has any idea of what an inspiration he was to me during that seminal period at Alfred.
Chris Baskin's website has his current work available as well as his thoughts on various firing methods, etc.
Definitely worth a read! http://chrisbaskin.com
Labels:
Alfred University,
Chris Baskin,
grad school,
other potters
Monday, January 7, 2013
Sake Set from Shigaraki, Japan
I just figured I would share a few more images from pots in our collection that we re-discovered a few weeks ago.
This sake set was given to me as a gift (and no, they are not looking for a new home). They were made in Shigaraki, Japan. I have always wanted to go to Shigaraki. I love the roughness of the clay; the woodfire marks, the ash drips... it was what I hoped to create in my own woodfired work.
Labels:
Japan,
other potters,
sake set,
Shigaraki,
woodfired pottery
Sunday, January 6, 2013
More Pottery Looking for a New Home
This carved dinner plate and tumbler are
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
You Slow, Slow Bastards
No, I am not being humorous here.
I posted all these cool pots here on my blog, and no one has really said much of anything.
I posted them 2 min ago on FB and they are FLYING off our shelves.
You know what? That'll teach me.
Blogs suck.
I posted all these cool pots here on my blog, and no one has really said much of anything.
I posted them 2 min ago on FB and they are FLYING off our shelves.
You know what? That'll teach me.
Blogs suck.
Monday, December 31, 2012
No More Mac & Cheese
When I first made this casserole, I had never joined a thrown form to a slab successfully. Most of the time, I could be assured that there would be some cracking; either an S-crack in the middle or a crack along the seam where the thrown cylinder joined the slab. After trying all sorts of solutions, I tried just dropping the freshly thrown cylinder on the wet slab and leaving them to dry together before doing anything.... and lo-and-behold... it worked. These forms would later morph into my oval baking dishes and my oval pitchers and my oval vase forms.
This is a very used casserole. It was woodfired, with only a liner glaze on the inside. It has seen mostly mac and cheese in its day. Now that I no longer consume pasta and cheese with regularity, it is time for this handsome casserole to find a new home. I give no guarantees about it lasting another decade or two, going in and out of an oven and all the temperature extremes. So far, it has been very accommodating of thermal shock. I would imagine, if you continued baking with it, and NOT preheating the oven, it would last quite a long while still.
This casserole is up for grabs. Pay the postage on it, or come pick it up.
Saturday, December 29, 2012
Friday, December 28, 2012
Other Pots Needing New Homes
Woodfired, but beyond that, I can't remember much. I am mortified that I can't recall who made this. Definitely happened in Utah. Hand sized. Makes a nice cup.
Not a terribly large jar. Great for a small batch of cookies. I think this was made by Tony Clennell but I am not sure. One of my students glazed it at the end of the year when we were emptying shelves and tossing bisqueware.
I can't recall who made this. Tall mug. Nice airbushed blue glaze over Oatmeal, cone 10, reduction.
All of these pots are up for grabs. Pay for shipping or come out to the studio to pick them up. Who ever claims them, gets them. I'll edit this post to reflect when they are gone.
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Two More Pots Looking For a New Home
This gnarly jar was made by Testuya Yamada, back when he and I were "special students" at Alfred University. This is not a light jar. If you think you want it shipped, I will need a note from your doctor, proving that you have full control of your faculties. (Wood fired, cone 10, with Oribe glaze)
This was made by David Kingsbury, from Ithaca, NY. Cone 10, matte glazes. Quite large; holds more than half a gallon.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Should've Taken Better Notes
I feel like a failure. I look at these pots and I remember the faces that made them, but the names escape me. I think the small mug above was made by Wil Shykaruk from Canada, but it doesn't have his usual chop. The rest of the pots in this post are anonymous.
This pot has found a new home. YAY!
The last image is of the very first cup I ever purchased. My girlfriend at the time, Jen, found it for me in a gallery in Port Townsend. She wanted me to make work like this. Yeah. Not so much.
All of these pots need to find new homes. Prefer local adopters, but if you want to pay USPS or FedEx to get it home, we can arrange for that too.
Saturday, December 22, 2012
Other Pots From Our Collection
This mug is one of Jason Walker's from back when we were in school together at Utah State in Logan. This is one of the most amazing examples of freehand brushwork I have ever seen. If I remember right, Jason was working for a sign-painter doing hand-painted signs. What a way to learn the skill of the brush! Inside, where the lens couldn't quite see, is a stunning penguin, staring up from the last bits of my morning's green tea.
Friday, December 21, 2012
End of the Year Give-away
As I was going through the last three crates of pots from our collection, I found these two bowls that I made back when I was in Utah. They need a new home. Speak up and they're yours. We'll ship if you'll foot the bill for shipping. Otherwise you can come and pick them up here at the shop. So who wants some new/old pots for the new year?
(just a minor footnote: these pots are now spoken for and will be shipped out asap.) 12/22/12
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Giving It Another Try (598)
598, 1998, untitled, fired to cone 8 over three days, and cooled
for three days, oxidation. $1200
This platter never received a wonderfully descriptive or artistic name. It still sits there, with it's original designation: 598. It wasn't the five hundred and ninety-eighth platter... rather it was made in May 1998. That really just takes into account when it was thrown. In many instances it was months between when the platter was thrown and when it was glazed and then fired.
When it first came out of the kiln I was so disappointed with the glaze blisters. I almost smashed this platter into gravel, I was so frustrated. I kept it on my shelves for a few weeks in hopes that I would find something redeeming about the flaws. Over the next month it began to grow on me. By the time I put it on the way for its first vertical exhibition, I was quite taken with it.
Some of these details may end up as posters. The level of detail is staggering. So much rich color and texture!!
Labels:
glaze,
glaze tectonics,
nikkor 60mm f/2.8 macro,
Nikon
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Untitled: 5198II
Trying to describe the slight metallic pearlescent cream glaze, and how it interacts with the fluid blue gloss glaze is downright impossible. The recrystalization of the fluid blue is almost like watching ice form on a still pond. This platter was shown in the Ithaca Ceramics Exhibition back in 2008 and is still available for purchase or for exhibition.
As you get closer and closer to the details, you can see that there are crystals that are partly submerged in the blue glaze. I wonder if they are growing up or down through the glass!
Labels:
crystals,
details,
glaze,
glaze tectonics,
macro,
nikkor 60mm f/2.8 macro
Monday, December 3, 2012
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