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Saturday, November 4, 2017

Key Russell, Student Work, Ceramic II, Independent Body of Work






Ceramic, metal, wood, canvas.




Ceramic, metal, rope. 



Maya Vivas, Artist and Flagler Graduate

"Black" is comprised of a series of ceramic wall sculptures using black clay. Paralleling ideas of dissection and articulation in terms of taxidermy and the cabinet of curiosities, Black quite literally dissects, arranges & organizes representations of internal organs for your viewing pleasure. The concept of this series originates from my own hypochondriac tendencies, mixed with ideas of elegance, sensuality, & body horror. All of these concepts filtered through my own identities & the baggage that these histories carry, has lead to a body of work that is all at once alluring & repulsive. 

There is a long history throughout the world of colonization, and the use of blackness as a commodity. Everything from physical bodies to music has been forcibly made available for white consumption. Through the use of black clay and the physical act of the work being hung and available for purchase, the works make a direct connection to the slave auction, implicating the viewer as a participant in the capitalistic game of purchasing black goods. These pieces of black body are on display for one to judge, revere, gawk, ponder, and covet. The choice of using a black clay body extends far beyond aesthetics. What gives this clay its color is the high concentration of the mineral manganese. While harmless when fired, prolonged exposure to this clay dust in it’s raw from, can lead to manganese toxicity. Symptoms of which include, tremors, facial muscle spasms and difficulty walking, often preceded by psychiatric symptoms such as irritability aggressiveness and even hallucinations. Parallels can be drawn between the black experience and manganese toxicity. To have breath in a black body is a hazardous to ones health. 

/inˈtestən/

The tubular part of the digestive tract that extends from the stomach to the anus.

/ləNGs/

Two compound saccular organs that constitute the basic respiratory organ of air-breathing vertebrates.


/härt/

A hollow muscular organ that pumps the blood through the circulatory system by rhythmic contraction and dilation.

/ˈlivər/

A large  lobed glandular organ of vertebrates that secretes bile and causes important changes in many of the substances contained in the blood.





Cone 6 Porcelain & Luster, Hand built & Wheel thrown/altered, 2016, 4.5 x 3 feet






Elise Siegel, Artist




  • Portrait Bust with Cobalt and White Underglaze

  • 2015
  • ceramic, glaze
  • 25”x13”x8.5”


  • Portrait Bust with Lavender Hair and Black Base

  • 2015
  • ceramic, glaze 
  • 16”x10”x6”


Pink Bust with Torn Arm
  • 2010
  • ceramic, aqua resin, paint
  • 21"x13"x8"



Saturday, October 14, 2017

Art Axis

A great resource of contemporary artists. 

The mission of Artaxis is to provide a peer-reviewed source of contemporary artwork in ceramics and sculpture. Utilized as a resource by instructors, students, gallerists, curators, the general public, and contemporary artists, Artaxis.org strives to promote and enrich the field, while functioning as a direct and unobtrusive conduit between viewer and artist.

Link below:

https://artaxis.org/artists/


Sunday, August 27, 2017

Naomi J. Falk, Artist, United States

Field, 2003
Field continued the extension of self. Through the repetitive gesture and obsessive task of throwing large blocks of clay, I outlined the circumference of the area under my influence.



Swallow(ed) | 20' diameter | Porcelain, saltwater, reclaimed wood | 2006 - 2013 | Installation view | The Gallery at the Macomb Center for the Arts | Macomb Community College | Macomb, MI | Mar 2006 

Swallow(ed) began as a tribute to the individuals affected by 2004's tsunami in Southeast Asia. In 2005, while continuing to build the piece, Katrina, and several others hurricanes, hit the Gulf Coast of the United States. Since then, other coastal areas of the U.S. and the world have been dramatically impacted by natural and man-made disasters. Suffering ongoing effects from Hurricane Sandy (2012), for instance, and the earthquakes in Haiti (2010) and Japan (2011), the work remains relevant and timely. Much remains to be done. 



In Swallow(ed), each palm-sized porcelain bowl is filled with saltwater, representing the ocean, as well as tears. In the wake of the ocean's force, much was damaged or lost. Purposefully built with reclaimed wood, the tables represent, among other things, the man-made structures we create and inhabit. 





Recall(ed) Quilt | 2 1/2" x 1 1/2" x 1" each, 40" wide x var. overall | Porcelain, flannel, batting, organza, thread | | 2010 - ongoing | 

Continuing with the work I did in Recall(ed), the installation/performance involves quilting hand-made porcelain pieces under sheer organza, laying to rest those who have lost their lives in the Iraq war. The remaining porcelain pieces are piled in a 'nest' next to the rocking chair I work in, with the quilt trailing across my lap and off onto the floor.


Jennifer Ling Datchuk, Artist




Human hair woven into the ceramic forms. 


"My work has always dealt with identity, with the sense of being in-between, an imposter, neither fully Chinese nor Caucasian. I have learned to live with the constant question about my appearance: “What are you?” I change my response depending on my hair, make-up, clothes, what I am doing, where I am at, or what I am eating – who I am at the moment. I find people are rarely satisfied with my answer. I explore this conflict through my chosen media – porcelain, which nods to my Chinese heritage but also represents “pure” white – the white desire I find in both cultures. Bound by these conditions, I stitch together my individual nature, unravel the pressures of conformity, and forever experience pain in search of perfection." 

Artist Website:


Ryan Takaba, Artist





Above image example of "figurative bust". 









https://vimeo.com/29158752


STATEMENT
Growing up in Hawai`i, I spent much of my youth observing my grandparent’s attentiveness to their landscape, a residence that was built on ancient lava rock.  With my grandmother in her 90’s and my grandfather since passed, she now has a much smaller space to tend to.  The clippings of flowers she receives from her garden adorn a bedroom altar where every morning my grandmother visits my grandfather through daily prayer.  A prayer involving lighting a candle, burning incense, and arranging fresh flowers.              
I am interested in daily ritual, specifically in relation to the flower and the vase, the candle and the wax, and the incense and ash.  What defines a ritual and not a habit is a question I have been asking with this work.  My grandmother's dedication and belief makes me believe that her process transcends habit into ritual, and ritual into truth.

My studio practice stems from my research in landscape, architecture, and design looking to my grandmother as a source to investigate how objects are used, cared for, and honored.  I am interested in the arrangement of these objects, and through their use, meaning and the composition can change over time.  My practice is performative and durational, attending to the pieces daily through the length of a show.  In some works, I cut, assemble, and connect flowers to complete a composition, and sort stem sizes to regulate its flow of water.  I light candles to use heat to break wax patterns, and I burn incense to mark the wall and cascade ash.  This act engages themes of longing, waiting,and return.  


David Hicks, Artist


Panel Composition in Bluegreen, 2017, Ceramic, 28 x 27 x 10 inches



Dark Fruit, 2017, Ceramic,rope, and metal, 19 x 15 x 9 inches.


MIAMI — American artist David Hicks‘ most recent solo exhibition Clippings and Hard Fruit at Mindy Soloman (May 20 – August 5, 2017) explores how we experience nature and our environment has evolved. The exhibition with its prophetic ceramic wall hangings and vessels reveals an unsettling liminality between modern humanity and the natural world.



Shari Mendelson, Artist

NOT Clay! 
However! 
We can see an influence from Greek and Roman vessels 
and 
how ideas about form, texture, line and space create a meaningful object.  




Shari Mendelson, “Ennion-like Vessel with Ten Handles,” (2015), 15 x 6 x 6 inches




Two-handled jar (amphora) with snakes on handles

Greek
Late Geometric IIA Period
735–720 B.C.
source mfa.org



Shari Mendelson, “Large Purple Vessel with Yellow,” (2016), 28 x 16 x 16 inches









Shari Mendelson, “Blue Syrian Vessel with Long Neck,” (2016), 15 x 5.5 x 6 inches






Terracotta pyxis (box with lid)

Period: Geometric
Date: mid-8th century B.C.
Culture: Greek, Attic
Medium: Terracotta
Dimensions: Overall: 4 1/8 x 11 1/4 in. (10.5 x 28.5 cm)
H. with cover 9 15/16 in. (25.2 cm)
Description: While pyxides are frequently found in burials, they also may have served as a container for small objects during the owner's lifetime. In the grave they may have contained perishable offerings, such as food. The knob of the lid assumes many different forms. Here the articulation of the shaft contrasts particularly with the smooth surface of the box.





Barrel oinochoe, 8th–early 7th century b.c.; Italo-Geometric
Italian peninsula, possibly Campania or Etruria
Terracotta
H. 13 ¼ in.
Metropolitan Museum:
In the Geometric period of about 900 to 700 B.C., Greeks continued to be active seafarers, seeking opportunities for trade and founding new, independent cities in Asia Minor, Italy, and Sicily. In the Late Geometric period, around 760–750 B.C., Greeks from the island of Euboea (near northern Attica) established a colony at Pithekousai, near the Bay of Naples. The settlement received Levantine goods in quantity, as well as Corinthian, Cycladic, and Rhodian pottery, most of which were exported to the Italian mainland. This influx of goods and designs from the East played a major role in initiating the Italic and Etruscan Orientalizing period (ca. 750–575 B.C.). Likewise, Euboean vases were exported from Pithekousai to Campania and Etruria, as were local (Italic) vessels decorated with typical Euboean Late Geometric designs, as on this oinochoe, a small jug that was used to dip out and serve wine. Its main figurative scene, two goats standing upright and, perhaps, nibbling at a tree, is a familiar motif in Near Eastern art, and appears on vases made in Euboea at this time. The distinctive barrel shape of this vessel, however, is more Italic than Greek; similar oinochoi have been found in Etruria, near Bisenzio, and at Marsiliana.
Source: metmuseum.org



Between the beginning of the sixth and the end of the fourth centuries B.C., black- and red-figure techniques were used in Athens to decorate fine pottery while simpler, undecorated wares fulfilled everyday household purposes. With both techniques, the potter first shaped the vessel on a wheel. Most sizeable pots were made in sections; sometimes the neck and body were thrown separately, and the foot was often attached later. Once these sections had dried to a leather hardness, the potter assembled them and luted the joints with a slip (clay in a more liquid form). Lastly, he added the handles. In black-figure vase painting, figural and ornamental motifs were applied with a slip that turned black during firing, while the background was left the color of the clay. Vase painters articulated individual forms by incising the slip or by adding white and purple enhancements (mixtures of pigment and clay). In contrast, the decorative motifs on red-figure vases remained the color of the clay; the background, filled in with a slip, turned black. Figures could be articulated with glaze lines or dilute washes of glaze applied with a brush. The red-figure technique was invented around 530 B.C., quite possibly by the potter Andokides and his workshop. It gradually replaced the black-figure technique as innovators recognized the possibilities that came with drawing forms, rather than laboriously delineating them with incisions. The use of a brush in red-figure technique was better suited to the naturalistic representation of anatomy, garments, and emotions.
The firing process of both red- and black-figure vessels consisted of three stages. During the first, oxidizing stage, air was allowed into the kiln, turning the whole vase the color of the clay. In the subsequent stage, green wood was introduced into the chamber and the oxygen supply was reduced, causing the object to turn black in the smoky environment. In the third stage, air was reintroduced into the kiln; the reserved portions turned back to orange while the glossed areas remained black.
Painted vases were often made in specific shapes for specific daily uses—storing and transporting wine and foodstuffs (amphora), drawing water (hydria), drinking wine or water (kantharos or kylix), and so on—and for special, often ritual occasions, such as pouring libations (lekythos) or carrying water for the bridal bath (loutrophoros). Their pictorial decorations provide insights into many aspects of Athenian life, and complement the literary texts and 
 from the Archaic and, especially, Classical periods.

Department of Greek and Roman Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
October 2002


Phoebe Cummings, Artist


Phoebe Cummings uses unfired clay to make poetic and performative sculptures and installations that emphasize material, fragility, time, creation, and decay. Working across art, design, and ceramics, she has had a number of residencies in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Greenland, including three months as a Kohler Arts/Industry Resident (2008) and six months as the Ceramics Artist-in-Residence at the Victoria and Albert Museum (2010). She was also awarded a ceramics fellowship at London’s Camden Arts Centre (2012–13).


After the Death of the Bear, 2013; clay, cement, steel, wire and polythene, 7 x 5 x 3.5 meters. Installation at British Ceramics Biennial, Stoke-on-Trent, 2013.







Images and text source cfileonline.org

Saturday, August 19, 2017

Ruth Duckworth, Artist, b. 1919 Germany, d. 2009 USA



Above image an example of "stacking". 
These examples can also inspire the prompt "mountain" 
for the 22 Sculptures Assignment























2007

Ruth Duckworth, a sculptor whose work in clay and bronze included monumental sculptures and murals, as well as small-scale, intimate pieces, died last Sunday in Chicago. She was 90.
Her death was confirmed by Thea Burger, her agent.
Ms. Duckworth followed an idiosyncratic career path, starting as a stone mason in Britain and not turning to ceramics until her 40s, bringing a sculptor’s sensibility to it. Intent on doing large-scale ceramic work, then out of favor in Britain, she accepted a teaching appointment at the University of Chicago in 1964 and began executing monumental ceramic murals and, later, bronze sculptures.
Her stoneware murals, notably “Earth, Water and Sky” (1967-68) and “Clouds Over Lake Michigan” (1976), incorporated topographical swirls and abstractly rendered cloud patterns. Her small works, by contrast, were often delicate and abstract, with surrealist overtones. The influences were varied. The stylized modernism of Henry Moore, Constantin Brancusi and Isamu Noguchi competed for attention with Egyptian, Mexican and Cycladic art.
“She was a great original, pioneering her own path within ceramics, brilliantly exploring the idea of the figure, the vessel and the more abstract form,” said Emmanuel Cooper, a British ceramist and an editor of Ceramic Review.
Ruth Windmüller was born in Hamburg, Germany, on April 10, 1919. Because her father was Jewish, she could not receive an art education under the Nazi regime, so in 1936 she left Germany for Britain, where she studied at the Liverpool School of Art.
With the outbreak of the war she began traveling with her own puppet show in northern England and then found work in a munitions factory making bullets. After studying stone carving at the City and Guilds of London Art School, she worked for a time carving tombstone decorations.
In 1949 she married the sculptor Aidron Duckworth. The marriage ended in divorce. She is survived by a sister, Ilse Windmüller of Holyhead, Wales.
After visiting en exhibition of art from India, Ms. Duckworth resolved to become a ceramist and enrolled at the Central School of Arts and Crafts in London in 1956, mainly to learn about glazes. Initially she produced tableware in stoneware and porcelain, but gradually her work became more abstract and sculptural, with forms suggesting pebbles and rocks. It also assumed grander dimensions.
Ceramists, most of them wedded to the tradition of functional pottery thrown on a wheel, puzzled over Ms. Duckworth’s hand-shaped works. Sculptors, working in wood, stone or metal, took a dim view of clay as a medium.
lthough it was dismissed out of hand by Bernard Leach, Britain’s leading ceramist, her work made an immediate impact on younger artists. “Ceramics studios across Britain were soon bursting with pinched porcelain fungi and swelling stoneware fruits,” Tony Franks, an English ceramist, recalled in the Australian magazine Ceramics in 2007. “Organic clay had arrived like a harvest festival, and would remain firmly in place well into the ’70s.”
After taking up a teaching post at the University of Chicago, where she remained until 1977, Ms. Duckworth was commissioned to execute a suite of murals for the entry atrium of the university’s new Geophysical Sciences Building. Using topographical illustrations of Mount Fuji and satellite photos of the earth, she created “Earth, Water and Sky,” a suite of murals covering four walls, with porcelain clouds suspended from the ceiling.
Her most important large-scale work, “Clouds Over Lake Michigan,” is in the Chicago Board Options Exchange Building. Mingling abstract and figurative elements, it depicts the watershed of Lake Michigan overlaid with archaeological fantasies and natural forms. A third major ceramic work was “The Creation” (1982-83), commissioned by the Congregation Beth Israel in Hammond, Ind.
In the last decade she completed several monumental bronze sculptures for the campuses of Eastern Illinois University in Charleston, Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago, and Lewis & Clark Community College in Godfrey, Ill.
Although she remained in Chicago after retiring from teaching, working since the 1980s in a former pickle factory on the city’s north side, Ms. Duckworth exhibited widely in the United States and Europe.
In 2005 she was the subject of a retrospective, “Ruth Duckworth: Modernist Sculptor,” which opened at the Museum of Arts and Design in Manhattan and traveled to six museums around the United States.
Correction: November 1, 2009 
An obituary last Sunday about the sculptor Ruth Duckworth omitted part of the name of one of the colleges for which she completed monumental bronze sculptures in the last decade. It is Lewis & Clark Community College in Godfrey, Ill. — not Lewis and Clark College. (There is a Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Ore.)