here - Ceramic Arts Daily
Transcription
here - Ceramic Arts Daily
2 Ceramics Monthly William C. Hunt....................................... Editor Barbara Tipton...................... Associate Editor Robert L. Creager........................ Art Director Ruth C. Butler............................. Copy Editor Valentina Rojo...................... Editorial Assistant Mary Rushley.............. Circulation Manager Connie Belcher . . . . Advertising Manager Spencer L. Davis................................. Publisher Editorial, Advertising and Circulation Offices 1609 Northwest Boulevard, Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212 (614) 488-8236 Ceramics Monthly (ISSN 0009-0329) is published monthly except July and August by Professional Publications, Inc.—S. L. Davis, Pres.; P. S. Emery, Sec.: 1609 North west Blvd., Columbus, Ohio 43212. Second class postage paid at Columbus, Ohio. Subscription Rates: One year SI6, two years $30, three years $40. Add $5 per year for subscriptions outside the U.S.A. Change of Address: Please give us four weeks advance notice. Send both the magazine wrapper label and your new address to Ceramics Monthly, Circulation Office, Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212. Contributors: Manuscripts, photographs, color separations, color transparencies (in cluding 35mm slides), graphic illustrations, texts and news releases dealing with ceramic art are welcome and will be considered for publication. A booklet describing procedures for the preparation and submission of a man uscript is available upon request. Send man uscripts and correspondence about them to The Editor, Ceramics Monthly, Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212. Indexing: Articles in each issue of Ceramics Monthly are indexed in the Art Index. A 20-year subject index (1953-1972) covering Ceramics Monthly feature articles, Sugges tions and Questions columns is available for $1.50, postpaid from the Ceramics Monthly Book Department, Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212. Additionally, each year’s arti cles are indexed in the December issue. Copies and Reprints: Microfiche, 16mm and 35mm microfilm copies, and xerographic re prints are available to subscribers from Uni versity Microfilms, 300 N. Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Copies in micro fiche are also available from Bell & Howell, Micro Photo Division, Old Mansfield Road, Wooster, Ohio 44691. Back Issues: Back issues, when available, are $3 each, postpaid. Write for a list. Postmaster: Please send address changes to Ceramics Monthly, Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212. Copyright © 1984 Professional Publications, Inc. All rights reserved March 1984 3 4 Ceramics Monthly Ceramics Monthly Volume 32, Number 3 March 1984 Feature Articles Collaboration................................................................... 29 Portfolio: Henry Varnum Poor..................................... 31 Boston Mills Ceramics Fair by William Hunt......................................................... 42 Yosuke Haruta by Pegram Harrison.................................................. 45 Legitimizing the Ashtray by Ron Klein............................................................... 46 British Salt Glaze by Barley Roscoe........................................................ 49 French Clay Expression................................................. 51 Soup Tureens by Victoria Donohoe.................................................. 52 Hobart Cowles White Glazes by Lili Krakowski....................................................... 60 Departments Letters............................................................................... 7 Where to Show................................................................ 13 Suggestions....................................................................... 17 Questions ......................................................................... 19 Itinerary........................................................................... 21 Comment: Letter to a Young Potter by Dennis Parks.......................................................... 25 News & Retrospect.......................................................... 65 Classified Advertising..................................................... 86 Index to Advertisers 88 The Cover “Soup in Sandwich,” 19 inches in height, entirely con structed of white earthenware, with low-fire com mercial glazes, by David Gilhooly, Fort Bragg, Cal ifornia. A completely functional tureen, the top slice of “bread” may be lifted to reveal a smoothly glazed interior, while the protruding “stalk of celery” is the handle for a metal ladle. For a look at additional contemporary approaches to serving soup, turn to the article beginning on page 52. March 1984 5 O ULKAM1US 1V1U1N 1HLY Letters pH and Plasticity I was glad to see Angela Fina’s article (January) about adjusting the pH of clay bodies to improve plasticity. Living in the Southwest where many of the springs pro duce soda water, I’ve discovered the same thing. [Though] I don’t approach it in the same calculated manner (more like about ½ cup of vinegar per 100 pounds dry materials) it has become an important ingredient in all my clay bodies. The pH of the water in clay and glazes has other effects. Clay, even though mixed in a “too soft” consistency, will get hard while aging in the bags if the water is too basic. Many glazes settle rapidly to the bottom of the container in a dry, hard mass when mixed in alkaline water. I’ve found that about an ounce of vinegar added to 4 gallons of liquid keeps glazes suspended. I would like to underscore Angela Fina’s final statement that clay manufacturers everywhere should pay close attention to this phenomenon. Potters who buy premixed bodies should have superior clay to work with. Clyde Tullis Colorado Springs The Golden Pot Award for 1984 should go to Angela Fina for her recent article, “Im proving Plasticity.” How nice to know that I was not alone with a slumping body that soaked up and retained more water than a good natural sponge. But ah, the wonder of vitamins! My body has come alive. It stands taller and straighter than ever before. As An gela pointed out, vitamins are an expensive way to go, but, after all, my body is worth it. Thank you, Angela, for a new lease on life. Lynne Melchior Rothman North Little Rock, Ark. What a pleasure to read Angela Fina’s clear and no-nonsense article on pH in clays! This sort of explanation and lucid delinea tion of a problem (that I’m sure has plagued many potters and for which they often get no explanation in their schooling) is of value to everyone. It is a pleasure to read that sort of thing in CM. A great magazine. Warren MacKenzie Stillwater, Minn. Angela Fina is right in going to a dry acid, but there are other organic acids which are not nearly so expensive. In a 1982-83 chem ical company catalog, ascorbic acid runs $21.85 per half kilogram, citric acid is $10.30 per kilogram and fumaric acid is $8.75 per kilogram. These are laboratory-grade prices; if you can accept technical-grade material, which is often just as pure but not overly analyzed (which is what raises the cost), the price per 50-pound bag comes down dra matically. This may be more than many pot ters wish to pay, but if the user has a large operation, it will probably be worth it in the long run. Kept in tightly closed plastic con tainers, away from water, these acids will last indefinitely. I am a chemist at a small supply company and can’t help but heed a call for help. Gla cial acetic acid is not a nice thing to have around even if you do have a good exhaust fan. Glen Lewis Fort Worth not clay artists but all artists. There needs to be a new, fresh approach to the business of running a gallery. A craft shop is not a fine arts gallery and you would not see some one of Price’s stature in a shop that sells and thinks $35 casseroles. In an age when Billy Idol is more popular than Price or Pete Voulkos it is time for a change and for the beginning of a more so phisticated attitude toward the arts by every one. Jens Morrison Oceanside, Calif. Ken Price at Castelli’s I am delighted that Ken Price is making Fair It Isn’t After reading Comment by Ersatz Sou it big (January) and I commend CM for publishing the selling prices of his work. It briquet (who could fail to read anything un has a monumental quality so the sizes, too, der that pen name?) in the January issue— who needs the New Yorker? were a great surprise. John G. Grace Jessie D. Wetzel Mokelumne Hill, Calif. Tucson The article by R. Clayton Baker in the January issue made me squirm. About 90— no 95%—of most who write about ceramics (underdog of the fine arts and champion of the crafts) seem to approach the subject the same way, with the same old philosophy, with the same whimpering, “Let’s hear it for the beaten clay art syndrome,” with the same old, boring attitude that, “God love Ken Price for helping ‘our’ cause. Thank you (snivel) for working in ceramics.” The genius of Leo Castelli is not that he actually exhibited ceramic work by Ken Price but rather that he saw art. He did not see clay. The medium was transcended. Ken Price has been around for a very long time. Since Otis with Voulkos, since all those “eggs” and painted, nonutilitarian objects, since lizard cups and small nonmacho works of art, since “Happy’s Curios” and hot little color com bos, since the days of not so long ago when Ken Price did porno plates and made cups art. Ken has always been an artist not caught up in the absurdity—crafts and arts. His suc cess, both then and now, lies in his ability to not lock into ceramics as art but rather to choose the medium and then make art. Of course it is a very positive thing that work sold. Of course we are all happy. Of course we are delighted that an artist is re ceiving deserved recognition. But I am mostly wondering why it took Castelli so long to show Price. I am wondering why it will take a lot longer to show more clay sculpture. I am wondering why pottery is so prevalent in so many galleries and why nonutilitarian ob jects sell so poorly. I am wondering why Leo Castelli didn’t flinch showing Price’s work although they were not vessels. (Would it have helped sell more work if the works had had holes in them?) I think it is high time that crafts gallery directors and fine arts gallery directors re evaluate their positions relative to artists— Continued discussion of ceramics aesthet ics and criticism is very important. The Western potter has received very little atten tion from art historians and critics. We need to clarify and articulate an aesthetic philos ophy to help place the potter/ceramic artist in the broader field of the visual arts. Wayne Cardinalli Stirling, Ont. A picture is worth a thousand words: more pictures of pots, less words. No matter what is said about a potter or his work (the proof is in the pudding) let us see for ourselves. Marie Dunn Biscoe, N. C. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Objection I read the article on carpal tunnel syn drome in the December issue, and my ob jection is that it mentions acupuncture only slightly and last. The physician used as a reference is obviously an M.D. and not thor oughly trained in traditional Chinese med icine. A true acupuncturist has such training and would stress that acupuncture is very effective with carpal tunnel as well as potters’ other ills (low back pain, stiff knees, shoulder and neck arthritis). The key is to find a heal er trained in Oriental medicine. Their phi losophy is vast and very different from that of western M.D.’s. Katy Cauker Jacksonville, Ore. CTS Surgery Seldom Successful I did “submit to the knife” and had the operation a year ago, followed by six weeks in a cast and a month of therapy. Less than a year later, the same problem has recurred. Doctors gave no guarantee that surgery was a solution, and repeating the surgery is no answer. I have been told that surgery is selContinued March 1984 7 8 CERAMICS MONTHLY Letters ‘in-depth’ (just the pictures and how they did it).” This kind of attitude indicates these peo dom successful. I have found new ways of ple still consider ceramics to be a nice, com working by using different hand and wrist fortable little craft, and they find pictures and positions, especially where applying pressure articles about works that go beyond this to be highly threatening and somehow insult is involved. Change positions frequently. Currently I am awaiting the arrival of my ing. Maybe it’s threatening because it might new de-airing pugmill. I am in hopes that force reexamination of their narrow concept eliminating hand mixing and wedging will of what clay is, or can be. A person can read something and not agree with it, or dislike be helpful. Gail Kristensen it, but does that mean it should not be shown? Sedona, Ariz. This smacks of moral-majority-type censor ship—ban it, remove it from the shelves— I must be the world’s greatest authority instead of letting people decide for them on carpal tunnel syndrome. I was awake at nights for over nine months with numb hands and pains up to the shoulders. I hated to quit throwing, but realized it was time to see a doctor. He immediately diagnosed CTS, and recommended surgery. I had both hands op erated on at the same time. I was only in the .hospital three days, and stitches were out in six. Rehabilitation therapy? The potter’s wheel. Constricting the clay to center, and using the fingers to pull up the walls were perfect therapy with only baseball-size pieces of clay at first, then on to larger ones. It was fantastic. Mind you, it was a little inconven ient having both hands fixed at the same time, but if you have CTS, don’t mess around with diets, etc. Have the surgery and get it over with. I heartily disagree with Rogier Donker, who places the blame on wrong throwing habits. I had CTS long before I became a potter, but didn’t realize it. Martha Gillespie Fort Worth selves. It seems to me that CM’s editorial choices try to reflect the range of things going on in ceramic art today. It can’t go back to being cutesy crafts anymore. Bette Drake Cleveland Ceramic Portraiture I am a graduating student from California State University, Chico, and was extremely pleased to find the article by Beverly Mayeri in the December issue. Figurative clay sculp ture is more and more in demand and it is Continued Maybe It’s Not CTS! In following the ongoing discussions about CTS I have seen no reference to the malady to which I am susceptible. As a potter/teacher I was panicked two years ago when I de veloped severe pain and loss of strength in my left hand and wrist. I thought I was head ed for surgery. Following diagnostic X-rays it was determined that I had a cyst on the bone. With use of a leather wrist brace, mod ification of my diet (no caffeine or chocolate), and a variable throwing schedule, I have been able to control the condition. Potters should be aware that carpal tunnel syndrome may not be the only diagnosis for that “pain in the wrist.” Sue Robinson Hanson, Mass. Moral-Majority-Type Censorship The article on carpal tunnel syndrome contains much useful information. I started having problems with this two years ago, af ter about 20 years of potting, and know now there are many others in the same boat. Any further information on it will be greatly ap preciated. Who knows, it could become the year’s most fashionable disease. I’m amazed by the number of letters say ing, “don’t print this, don’t show pictures of that, rewrite the articles and leave out the March 1984 9 1U UERAMICS MONTHLY Letters reassuring to see that the magazine is keep ing up with present work. We are all hungering for more articles by figurative artists or about figurative work out here in northern California. Linda C. Allred Chico, Calif. Mayer Shacter The Mayer Shacter article in the Novem ber CM was one of the best I have seen in the magazine yet. I hope CM will have more like this in the future. Mayer is obviously one of the greats in ceramics today. Minucha Colburn Mendocino, Calif. this most of the time, while giving this some cestuous group of teacher (academic)-begatstimes-isolated studio potter some nourishing student-becomes-teacher (academic)-begatsfood for thought. student—ad infinitum. I would like to hear Barbara Kelso more from the realists, the people who are Abington, Mass. making a living from clay. Are they too busy making a living to write? Bob McKay I would like to see more examples of grad Arthur, Ont. uate or student work. Gwendolyn Evans Louisville Share your thoughts with other readers. All letters must be signed, but names will be Incestuous Academics withheld on request. Address: The Editor, Sometimes articles are too esoteric, be Ceramics Monthly, Box 12448, Columbus, cause they are usually written by that in Ohio 43212. December Portfolio Walter Ostrom? What the hell! There have been a few potters in the world who have done a better job in glaze decoration. Steven H. Roberts Harrogate, Tenn. Lonely? Pottery must be the loneliest craft. We seem to isolate ourselves to totally concentrate on our work. Thanks for all the information and interesting views. It all helps give a reason why. Maureen Boyd Fall City, Wash. Have a Fit I think that the highlights in CM are the letters in which everyone has a fit about the types of art work, profiles, comments, de scriptions presented. Controversy has its place in the art world. It makes us more aware, makes us grow artistically. Suzan de Lambily Island Heights, N.J. Blessed Information and sharing of ideas, as well as techniques, unify all who create into a simple, blessed group. The transportation matters less than the destination. Sylvia Caplan Houston Article Balance I am a recent subscriber, and though I enjoy the articles on potters and the various stories on ceramics in other countries, why are all the artists so avant-garde? Merana Cadorette Milton, Vt. More articles about Scandinavian potters. The U.S.A. isn’t the whole world. Pirjo Polari-Khan Milpitas, Calif. I enjoy a balance between the absurd and the sublime, and CM seems to accomplish March 1984 11 12 Ceramics Monthly Where to Show exhibitions, fairs, festivals and sales Send announcements of juried exhibitions, fairs, festivals and sales at least four months before the entry deadline to: The Editor, Ceramics Monthly, Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212; or call: (614) 488-8236. Add one month for listings in July and two months for those in August. International Exhibitions April 10 entry deadline Golden, Colorado Sixth annual “North Amer ican Sculpture Exhibition” (June 3-July 3) is open to residents of Canada, Mexico and the U.S.A. Juried from 8x10 glossy, black-and-white, profes sional quality photographs of up to 3 entries. Ju rors: John W. Cavanaugh and Edward J. Fraughton. $6000 in awards. Fee: $12.50 per entry. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: The Foothills Art Center, 809 Fifteenth St., Golden 80401; or call: (303) 279-3922. National Exhibitions March 16 entry deadline Guilford, Connecticut “Dreams and Other Il lusions,” a multimedia show, (May 6-27) is juried from 3 to 5 slides. Awards. Fee: $10. Send selfaddressed, stamped envelope to : Dreams, Guilford Handcrafts, Box 221, Guilford 06437; or call: (203) 453-5947. Las Vegas, Nevada “Las Vegas Small Sculp ture National” (May 6-30) is juried from a min imum of 3 slides per entry. Juror: Mike Mc Collum. Work should not exceed 18 inches in any direction. Fee: $15 for up to 3 entries. Awards. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Las Ve gas Art Museum, 3333 YV. Washington Ave., Las Vegas 89107; or call: (702) 647-4300. April 1 entry deadline Kalispell, Montana “Fish: An Exhibit” (May 18-June 30) is juried from slides of up to 3 entries. Work must approach fish as subject matter. Awards. Fee: $5 per entry. Contact: Hockaday Center for the Arts, Box 83, Kalispell 59901; or call: (406) 755-5268. State College, Pennsylvania “18th Annual Ju ried Crafts Exhibition” (July 8-August 31) is ju ried from slides of up to 2 entries. $2000 in awards. Entry fee: $5; exhibition fee: $15. Send self-ad dressed, stamped, business envelope to: Joyce Ann Hagen, 230 Burnside St., Bellefonte, Pennsylvania 16823; or call: (814) 355-4013. April 25 entry deadline Buffalo, New York “Created by Hand Exhi bition” (June 9-July 5) is juried from slides of 2 works. Fee: $15. Jurors: Nancy Belfer and Jack Jauquet. Cash awards. Send self-addressed,stamped envelope to: Patti Brown/Joan Dobrin, Associated Art Organizations Gallery, 698 Main St., Buffalo 14202. May 15 entry deadline Radford, Virginia “Clay U.S.A., 1984” an nual ceramic competition (June 29-July 28) is juried from slides of up to 2 works. Juror: Val Cushing. Awards. Fee: $10. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Ed Baldwin, Radford Uni versity, Department of Fine Arts, Radford 24141; or call: (703) 731-5475. Regional Exhibitions March 10 entry deadline Hobbs, New Mexico “May Festival ’84— NMJC/LEAA Juried Six State All Media Ex hibition of Arts and Crafts” (May 3-25) is open to residents of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas and Utah. Juried from slides of up to 3 entries. Fee: $5 per entry. Jurors: Elizabeth Sasser and Hugh Gibbons. Contact: May Festival ’84 Art Coordinator, Community Development Of fice, New Mexico Junior College, Lovington Highway, Hobbs 88240. March 11 entry deadline Topeka, Kansas “Topeka Crafts Competition 8” (April 1-30) is open to residents of Kansas and the Saint Joseph/Kansas City, Missouri areas. Ju ried from works. Fee: $10. Contact: Gallery of Fine Arts, Topeka Public Library, 1515 W. Tenth, Topeka 66604; or call: (913) 233-2040. April 2 entry deadline Charlotte, North Carolina “Clay Matters ’84/ Open Competition” (May 1-30) is open to resi dents of North and South Carolina. Juried from slides and works. Juror: Lida Lowry. Awards. Fee: $10 for up to 3 entries. Contact: Clay Matters of Charlotte, 110 E. Seventh St., Charlotte 28202; or call: (704) 372-9664. April 7 entry deadline Kingston, Rhode Island “South County Art Association Open Exhibition” (April 12-27) is open to residents of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont. Ju ried from works. Fee: $4 per entry, up to 3 entries. Contact: Linda Wilke O’Malley, SCAA, Helme House, Rte. 138, Kingston 02881; or call: (401) 783-2195. May 12 entry deadline Toledo, Ohio “66th Annual Toledo Area Art ists’ Exhibition” (June 17-July 8) is open to res idents of northwestern Ohio and southeastern Michigan. Juried from works, up to 3 entries. Fee: $10. Contact: Toledo Museum of Art, Box 1013, Toledo 43697; or call: (419) 255-8000. May 15 entry deadline Moorestown, New Jersey “Clay ’84 at Per kins” (September 21-30) is juried from slides or works. Jurors: Paula Winokur and Larry Don ahue. Commission: 20%. Awards. Work must be hand-delivered. Send self-addressed, stamped en velope to: Clay ’84 at Perkins, Perkins Center for the Arts, Kings Hwy. and Camden Ave., Moores town 08057; or call: Peg Krolak, (609) 461-2051. June 15 entry deadline Great Falls, Montana “Centennial Great Falls: A Missouri River Meeting” (November 5-December 29) is open to current and former residents of Montana. Juried from slides of up to 2 entries. Fee: $15. Awards totaling $2500. Contact: Paris Gibson Square, 1400 First Ave., N., Great Falls 59401; or call: (406) 727-8255. Fairs, Festivals and Sales March 9 entry deadline State College, Pennsylvania “The 18th An nual Central Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts” (July 12-15) is juried from 4 slides, 1 of display. Entry fee: $10. Booth fee: $140. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Lurene Frantz, Box 1023, State College 16804; or call: (814) 237-3682. March 10 entry deadline San Francisco, California “ACC Craftfair at San Francisco” (August 8-12) is juried from 5 slides. Entry fee: $10. Booth fees: $300-$650. Con tact: American Craft Enterprises, Box 10, New Paltz, New York 12561; or call: (914) 255-0039. Croton-on-Hudson, New York “7th Annual Great Hudson River Revival” (June 16-17) is ju ried from 5 slides. Fee: $50. Contact: Penny Co hen, Great Hudson River Revival, R.D. 1, Box 175, Putnam Valley, New York 10579. March 15 entry deadline Oakland, California “Festival at the Lake Craft Market” (June 1-3) is juried from slides. $2500 in awards. Entry fee: $5. Booth fee: $100 for a 1 Ox 10-foot space. Contact: Festival Craft Market, Goodfellow Catalog, Box 4520, Berkeley, Cali fornia 94704; or call: (415) 428-0142. Rochester; Minnesota “35th Annual Festival of the Arts” (June 3) is juried from slides. Awards. Fee: $20 for an 8x 10-foot space. Contact: Linda Frie, Rochester Art Center, 320 E. Center St., Rochester 55904; or call: (507) 282-8629. * New Paltz, New York “Woodstock—New Paltz Art and Craft Fair/Spring Show” (May 25-28) is juried from 5 slides. Entry fee: $5; booth fees: $ 195—$225 for a lOx 10-foot space. Send self-ad dressed, stamped envelope to: Scott and Neil Rub instein, Quail Hollow Events, Box 825, Woodstock, New York 12498; or call: (914) 679-8087. New Paltz, New York “Woodstock—New Paltz Art and Crafts Fair/Fall Show” (August 31September 3) is juried from slides. Entry fee: $5; booth fees: $195—S225. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Scott and Neil Rubinstein, Quail Hol low Events, Box 825, Woodstock, New York 12498; or call: (914) 679-8087. Salt Lake City, Utah “Utah Arts Festival” (June 27-July 1) is juried from slides. Fee: $200. Con tact: Olivette Trotter, Utah Arts Festival Foun dation, Suite 12, 445 E. 200, S., Salt Lake City 84111; or call: (801) 322-2428. Madison, Wisconsin “26th Annual Art Fair on the Square” (July 7-8) is juried from 4 slides, 1 of display. Entry fee: $5. Booth fee: $150 for an 8x 10-foot space. Contact: Art Fair on the Square, Madison Art Center, 211 State St., Madison 53703; or call: (608) 257-0158. Milwaukee, Wisconsin “Morning Glory Craft Fair” (August 11-12) is juried from 5 slides. Fees: $30 for members of Wisconsin Designer Crafts men; $40 for nonmembers. Contact: Dina Leib, Morning Glory Fair, Charles Allis Art Museum, 1630 E. Royall Place, Milwaukee 53202; or call: (414) 278-8295. March 16 entry deadline Albany, Georgia “The Albany Arts Festival” (April 14-15) is juried from 3 slides or photos. Fee: $40. Contact: Suzanne Heath, Albany Mu seum of Art, Box 571, Albany 31707; or call: (912) 435-0977. New York, New York Eighth annual “Amer ican Crafts Festival at the Lincoln Center” (June 30-July 1 and July 7-8) is juried from 5 slides. Ceramic juror: Laney Oxman. Entry fee: $7. Booth fee: $200-$250 for one weekend. Send self-ad dressed, stamped envelope to: Brenda Brigham, American Concern for Artistry and Craftsman ship, Box 3221, Upton Station, Hoboken, New Jersey 07030; or call: (201) 798-0220. New York, New York “Autumn Crafts Festival at Lincoln Center” (August 31-September 2 and September 7-9) is juried from 5 slides. Ceramic juror: Laney Oxman. Entry fee: $7; booth fee: $220 for one weekend. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to Brenda Brigham, American Concern for Artistry and Craftsmanship, Box 3221, Upton Station, Hoboken, New Jersey 07030; or call: (201) 798-0220. March 17 entry deadline Tucson, Arizona “Festival of the Arts” (April 7-8) is juried from 5 slides. Contact: Jarvis Harriman, Tucson Festival Society, 8 W. Paseo Re dondo, Tucson 85705; or call: (602) 622-6911. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania The 25th annual “Three Rivers Arts Festival” (June 8-24) is open to artists in Washington, D.C., Maryland, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Three Rivers Arts Festival, 4400 Forbes Ave., Pittsburgh 15213. March 21 entry deadline Deland, Florida “19th Annual Deland Out door Art Festival” (March 31-April 1) is juried from 3 slides or photos. Fee: $25 for a 1 Ox 12-foot space. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to Harriet Bolin, Deland Outdoor Art Festival, 215 Continued March 1984 13 Where to Show W. Minnesota Ave., Deland 32720; or call: (904) 736-0884. Pendleton, South Carolina “Historic Pendle ton Spring Jubilee” (April 7-8) is juried from 3 slides or photos. Fee: $25 for an 8x 10-foot space. Contact: Patricia Porter, Pendleton District His torical and Recreational Commission, Box 234, Pendleton 29670; or call: (803) 646-3782. March 30 entry deadline Mountain View, Arkansas “The Ozark Foot hills Craft Guild 22nd Annual Spring Show and Sale” (April 20-22) is juried from 5 slides. Ap plication fee: $5; booth fee: $20. Commission: 15% retail, 5% wholesale. Contact: Ozark Foothills Craft Guild, Box 800, Mountain View 72360; or call: (501) 269-3896. Baltimore, Maryland “Artscape ’84” (July 13-15) is open to residents of Washington, D.C., Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia. Juried from slides. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Crafts—Artscape ’84, c/o Mayor’s Advisory Committee on Art and Culture, 21 S. Eutaw St., Baltimore 21201; or call: (301) 396-4575. White Plains, New York “Westchester Art Workshop 6th Annual Craft Fair” (April 28-29) is juried from 5 slides. Booth fee: $70. Contact Wayne Kartzinel or Rose Petersons, Westchester County Center Building, White Plains 10607; or call: (914) 683-3986. March 31 entry deadline Oconomowoc, Wisconsin “Oconomowoc Fes tival of the Arts” (August 18-19) is juried from 6 slides and resume. Entry fee: $3. Booth fees: $45-$60. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Oconomowoc Festival of the Arts, Box 524, Oconomowoc 53066. April 1 entry deadline Salina, Kansas “Smoky Hill River Festival” (June 8-10) is juried from 5 slides. Awards. Entry fee: $3. Booth fee: $40 plus an example of work. Contact: Lana Jordan, Salina Arts Commission, Box 685, Salina 67402; or call: (913) 827-4640. Rome, New York “Rome Arts/Crafts Festival” (June 2-3) is juried from 4 slides. Entry fee: $2. Booth fees: $40-$50. Contact: Selena Abbey, Rome Art & Community Center, 308 W. Bloomfield St., Rome 13440; or call: (315) 336-1040. Dayton, Ohio The 17th annual “Art in the Park” (May 26-27) is juried from 3 slides. Con tact: Sharon Partlow, Art in the Park, Riverbend Art Center, 142 Riverbend Dr., Dayton 45405; or call: DeEarnest McLemore, (513) 228-1115. Milwaukee, Wisconsin “Wisconsin Festival of Art” (April 14-15) is juried from 5 slides or photos and resume. Fee: $80. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Dennis Hill, Wisconsin Festival of Art, 3233 S. Villa Circle, West Allis, Wisconsin 53227; or call: (414) 321-4566. April 9 entry deadline Park City, Utah “15th Annual Park City Art Festival” (August 4-5) is juried from 5 slides. En try fee: $10. Booth fees: $150-$250. Send selfaddressed, stamped envelope to: Festival Office, Kimball Art Center, Box 1880, Park City 84060; or call: (801) 649-8882. April 13 entry deadline Evanston, Illinois “Fountain Square Arts Fes tival” (June 30-July 1) is juried from slides. $3000 in awards plus purchase prizes. Contact: Evanston Chamber of Commerce, 807 Davis St., Evanston 60201; or call: (312) 328-1500. April 15 entry deadline Russellville, Arkansas “Arkansas Valley Arts and Crafts Fair and Sale” (November 9-11) is juried from slides or photos. Fee: $25. Contact: Lester Wright, Arkansas Valley Arts & Crafts Club, Box 1122, Russellville 72801. Coffeyville, Kansas “New Beginning Festival” (April 27-28) is juried from 3 slides. Fee: $20-$30 for an 8X20-foot space. Contact: Earlene Wheeler, Arts & Crafts Committee, Box 816, Coffeyville 67337; or call: (316) 251-2258. Muskegon, Michigan “Celebration 84 Seaway Arts Fair” (June 29-July 1) is juried from 3 slides. Fee: $45. Contact: P. A. Dollslager, West Mich igan Seaway Festival, 470 W. Western Ave., Mu skegon 49440; or call: (616) 722-6520. Margate, New Jersey “Craft Concepts 84” (June 9-13) is juried from 5 slides and resume. Jurors: Albert Green, Pamela Scheinman and Paul Stankard. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Craft Concepts, Jewish Community Center, 501 N. Jerome Ave., Margate 08402; or call: (609) 822-1167. Indiana, Pennsylvania “New Growth Arts Festival” (July 21-22) is juried from slides or pho tos. Fee: $50. Contact: Cecilia Maljan, Indiana Arts Council, Box 563, Indiana 15701; or call: (412) 357-2787. April 20 entry deadline Dubuque, Iowa “DubuqueFest ’84 Art Fair” (May 19-20) is juried from 3 slides or color pho tographs. Fee: $50 for a 1 Ox 10-foot space. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Dubuque Artists Guild, 422 Loras Blvd., Dubuque 52001; or call: (319) 583-6201. April 22 entry deadline Murrells Inlet, South Carolina “12th Annual Murrells Inlet Outdoor Arts & Crafts Festival” (April 27-29) is juried from 2 slides or photos. Awards. Fee: $60 for a 1 Ox 10-foot space. Contact: Wilma Martin, Magnolia Park, Box 231, Mur rells Inlet 29576; or call: (803) 651-7555. April 27 entry deadline Golden, Colorado “Arts on the Commons” (June 9) is juried from 3 to 5 slides. Entry fee: $10; booth fee: $30 for a 1 Ox 10-foot space. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Foothills Art Center, 809 Fifteenth St., Golden 80401; or call: (303) 279-3922. Chicago, Illinois “Beverly Art Center Art Fair & Festival” (June 16-17) is juried from 5 slides. Entry fee: $10. Booth fee: $17.50 for a 10X 10foot space. Contact: Pat McGrail, Beverly Art Center, 2153 W. Ill St., Chicago 60643; or call: (312) 445-3838. April 28 entry deadline Saratoga Springs, New York Fifth annual “Craft Fair at the Kool Jazz Festival” (June 30-July 1) is juried from slides. Entry fee: $5. Booth fee: $150 for an 8 X 10-foot space. Contact: Charles Dooley, Craftproducers Markets, R.D. 1, Box 323, Grand Isle, Vermont 05458; or call: (802) 372-4747. Burlington, Vermont Third annual “Church Street Festival of the Arts” (July 20-23) is juried from slides. Entry fee: $5. Booth fee: $175 for an 8 X 10-foot space. Contact: Charles Dooley, Craft producers Markets, R.D. 1, Box 323, Grand Isle, Vermont 05458; or call: (802) 372-4747. Manchester, Vermont Fifth annual “Southern Vermont Craft Fair” (August 4-6) is juried from slides. Entry fee: $5. Booth fee: $175 for an 8x 10foot space. Contact: Charles Dooley, Craftpro ducers Markets, R.D. 1, Box 323, Grand Isle, Vermont 05458; or call (802) 372-4747. April 30 entry deadline Baton Rouge, Louisiana “Craftworks Trade Show” (August 3-5), in conjunction with the World’s Fair in New Orleans, is juried from 6 slides, 1 of display. Entry fee: $8. Booth fees: $150-$425. Contact: Jennifer Martin, Craftworks, Rte. 4, Box 688, Gonzales, Louisiana 70737; or call: (504) 6734002. Newport News, Virginia “2nd Annual Hilton Villagefest” (May 11-12) is juried from slides or photos, 1 of display. Fee: $50 for a 1 Ox 10-foot space. Contact: Sandra Meadows, Promotional Activities Art Shows, 6 Conway Rd., Newport News 23606; or call: (804) 898-4210. Occoquan, Virginia “15th Annual Occoquan Craft Show” (September 29-30) is juried from slides. Fee: $100. Contact: LaVerne Carson, Occoquan Merchants Association, Drawer T, 404 Mill St., Occoquan 22125; or call: (703) 494-2848. May 1 entry deadline Carbondale, Colorado “13th Annual Carbondale Mountain Fair” (July 27-29) is juried from slides. Fee: $45 plus $10 damage deposit for a 1 Ox 10-foot space. Contact: Gay la Duckowitz, Carbondale Mountain Fair, Box 174, Carbondale 81623; or call: (303) 963-1680. Rockford, Illinois “36th Annual Greenwich Village Art Fair” (September 15-16) is juried from 4 slides. Entry fee: $5. Booth fee: $60 for a 10x15foot space. Contact: Patricia Schueller, Rockford Art Association, 737 N. Main St.. Rockford 61103; or call: (815) 965-3131. Chautauqua, New York “Chautauqua Crafts Festivals ’84” (July 6-8 and August 10-12) is ju ried from 4 slides. Entry fee: $5. Booth fee: $70 per show. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Donald D. Dowling, Chautauqua Crafts Fes tivals ’84, R.D. 2, Portage Hill Rd., Westfield, New York 14787. Croton-on-Hudson, New York “10th Annual Croton Craft Fair” (September 15-16) is juried from 4 slides of work, 1 of display. Fee: $70 for a 12x12-foot space. Contact: Monya Brown, 33 Lexington Dr., Croton-on-Hudson 10520; or call: (914) 271-5302. Newport, Rhode Island “Newport ’84 Arts & Crafts Expo” (July 13-15) is juried from 5 slides. Entry fee: $10. Booth fee: $200 for a lOx 10-foot space. Contact: Brian McCartney, Mil Produc tions, Box 93, Vernon, Connecticut 06066; or call: (203) 871-7914. Roanoke, Virginia “14th Annual Roanoke Craft Festival” (November 16-18) is juried from 5 slides. Entry fee: $5. Booth fees: $70-$140. Contact: Roanoke Museum of Fine Arts, Center in the Square, 1 Market Square, Roanoke 24011; or call: (703) 342-8945. May 4 entry deadline Syracuse, New York “The 14th Annual Downtown Syracuse Arts & Crafts Festival” (July 13-15) is juried from 5 slides. Entry fee: $5. Booth fee: $55. No commission. Awards. Contact: Down town Committee of Syracuse, 1900 State Tower Bldg., Syracuse 13202; or call: (315) 422-8284. May 26 entry deadline Marietta, Ohio “Indian Summer Arts & Crafts Festival” (September 14-16) is juried from 5 slides. Fee: $60 for a 1 Ox 10-foot space. Contact: Susan Kern, Indian Summer Festival, Box 266, Marietta 45750; or call: (614) 374-7146. June 1 entry deadline Sapphire, North Carolina “High Country Art and Craft Show” (June 29-July 1) is juried from slides or photos. Fee: $65. Send self-addressed, stamped, business envelope to: Virginia Smith, High Country Crafters, 29 Haywood St., Asheville, North Carolina 28801; or call: (704) 254-0070. Scaly Mountain, North Carolina “High Country Art and Craft Show” (July 6-8) is juried from slides or photos. Fee: $65. Send self-ad dressed, stamped, business envelope to: Virginia Smith, High Country Crafters, 29 Haywood St., Asheville, North Carolina 28801; or call: (704) 254-0070. Richmond, Virginia “9th Annual Richmond Craft Fair” (November 8-11) is juried from 5 slides. $6000 in awards. Fee: $10. Contact: Jan Detter, Hand Workshop, 1001 E. Clay St., Richmond 23219; or call: (804) 649-0674. June 15 entry deadline Sapphire, North Carolina “High Country Art and Craft Show” (July 20-22) is juried from slides or photos. Fee: $65. Send self-addressed, stamped, business envelope to: Virginia Smith, High Coun try Crafters, 29 Haywood St., Asheville, North Carolina 28801; or call: (704) 254-0070. June 16 entry deadline Saratoga Springs, New York Ninth annual “Adirondack Green Mountain Craft Fair” (Sep tember 14-16) is juried from slides. Entry fee: $5. Booth fee: $150. Contact: Charles Dooley, Craft producers Markets, R.D. 1, Box 323, Grand Isle, Vermont 05458; or call: (802) 372-4747. Killington, Vermont “The Killington Foliage Craft Fair” (September 28-30) is juried from slides. Entry fee: $5. Booth fee: $175 for an 8x 10-foot space. Contact: Charles Dooley, Craftproducers Markets, R.D. 1, Box 323, Grand Isle, Vermont 05458; or call: (802) 372-4747. March 1984 15 16 Ceramics Monthly Suggestions from our readers Decorating Tool Wedge-shaped sponges on short-handled rollers are sold in hard ware and paint stores for rolling paint into angles where walls and ceilings meet. They are wonderful for glaze-on-glaze decoration. Just pour a little glaze into a shallow bowl, run the roller edge through it, and then over the surface you want to decorate. You can get line variety by just changing the pressure, and it’s a great tool for production potters who like quick, spontaneous decorative effects. —Jo Claire, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Efficient, Hand-Operated Glaze Mixer A device commonly used for mixing by British plasterers may be adapted to large batches of glaze or slip. Use a long, large-headed screw to attach a broomstick to a small bicycle wheel rim. An ad justable metal ring clamp (known here as a jubilee clip) near the broomstick base will keep the handle from splitting when the screw is driven in. The wheel not only completely mixes the glaze but the rim naturally scrapes dried glaze off the sides and bottom of the container. The broomstick can be cut down, but by leaving it full length one can stand upright and prevent back strain. —A. H. Bolton, Bedingham, Norfolk, England Rib Source Thin, flexible ribs can be made from aluminum plates that are used to print newspapers and magazines. The plates could also be cut into narrow strips and used much like a chamois, producing a flawless, glassy-smooth surface. —Darrel L. Bowman, New Auburn, Wis. Plate Racks Any potter who can pull a handle can make a very simple and effective plate rack. First pull a large handle—about the size for a good, hefty pitcher. Stretch it out on any handy surface, preferably canvas and, starting at the small end, cut the handle in half length wise, about two-thirds of the way up its length. Carefully spread the ends a few inches apart, and then set the handle up and shape it so that the main part forms a high loop. Next curl the two small ends back toward the loop, cut the base so that it lies flat; then dry, glaze and fire. —Jo Claire, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Dollars for Your Ideas Ceramics Monthly pays $10 for each suggestion published; submis sions are welcome individually or in quantity. Include an illustration or photo to accompany your suggestion and we will pay $10 more if we use it. Send your ideas to CM, Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212. Sorry, but we can't acknowledge or return unused items. March 1984 17 18 Ceramics Monthly Questions Answered by the CM Technical Staff Q I am a professional potter, and am contemplating making a gift of one of the pots I have made to our local art museum. I have sold similar pots for $500, but the cost of the materials used in making the pot have amounted to no more than $5. Can I get a charitable deduction for my gift, and if so, how do I determine the amount of my deduction?—E.M. While we cannot offer specific tax advice, here are some general guidelines that apply to you and other potters. Whether you are a professional potter or amateur, you will be subject to certain limitations on the deductibility of contributions of property to charitable organizations. It is generally true that the fair market value of property which is the subject of a charitable gift is the beginning point for determining the amount of a charitable deduction. However, the deduction for a charitable contribution of a work of art by its creator, or of other property which would produce ordinary income if sold, is limited to the donor’s tax basis in the property, generally the donor’s out-of-pocket expenses which have not been previously deducted. In your case, assuming you have not previously deducted the cost of your materials, your charitable de duction would be limited to 85. You should realize that there are factors in addition to those discussed here which would affect the amount of a deduction for a charitable contribution. For example, not all charitable organiza tions are recognized under the Internal Revenue Code as proper recipients of deductible gifts, and for each taxpayer there are lim itations on the amount of a deduction for charitable gifts in any one year. You should consult your own tax advisor concerning the specific tax consequences of your proposed gift, as should any other artist contemplating a similar donation. 61 We have been extruding flower vases, then slab rolling bases, but find the process of cutting and adding slab bottoms both time con suming and less than creative. Have you any ideas for a more efficient method that doesn’t involve our slab roller which we’d rather use for other production purposes?—C.A. There are many solutions to your problem including cutting an extrusion so that a section of the wall can be flattened to form the bottom, removing the center piece from your extrusion die and wirecutting bottom slabs of exactly the right diameter, or extruding a ribbon from which bottoms can be cut and applied. But perhaps the most efficient method for adding bottoms to extruded forms is to set the tubes upright on a plaster slab, then pour casting slip (a related recipe) as thick as the desired bottom into the extrusion. The plaster draws out excess water, and the forms can be quickly removed from the plaster bat and set aside with little need for additional finishing. You may have to experiment with various com positions in order to get the shrinkage and water content right for a minimum of cracked pieces, but once these technicalities are worked out for your own clay body, the process is extremely fast. Subscribers’ inquiries are welcome and those of general interest will be answered in this column. Due to volume, letters may not be answered personally. Send questions to: Technical Staff, Ceramics Monthly, Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212. March 1984 19 20 Ceramics Monthly Itinerary conferences, exhibitions, workshops, fairs and other events to attend Send announcements of conferences, exhibitions, \workshops, juried fairs and other events at least seven weeks before the month of opening to: The Editor, Ceramics Monthly, Box 12448, Columbus, Ohio 43212; or call: (614) 488-8236. Add one month for listings in July and two months for those in August. International Conferences Massachusetts, Boston April 5-6 The annual conference of the International Academy of Ce ramics. For details, consult CM February Itin erary. Contact: David Davison, Ceramics De partment, Museum School, 230 The Fenway, Boston 02115. Canada, Alberta, Banff May 7-11 “Canadian Clay Conference ’84,” at the Banff Centre School, will address topics from education to aesthetics and criticism in a national context. Contact: Leslie Manning, The Banff Centre of Fine Arts, Box 1020, Banff, Alberta TOL OCO. Conferences Iowa, Ames March 22-25 “Women in Clay: The Ongoing Tradition,” a symposium and ex hibition. For details, consult CM February Itin erary. Contact: Women in Clay, The Octagon Cen ter for the Arts, Fifth and Douglas, Ames 50010; or call: (515) 232-5331. Massachusetts, Boston April 9-12 The an nual conference of the National Council on Ed ucation for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA) at Boston University, Massachusetts College of Art and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts. For details, consult CM January Itinerary. Contact: David Davison, Federal Furnace Pottery, Hardy Street, Dunstable, Massachusetts 01827. New Jersey, Montclair June 29-July 1 “Mid Atlantic States Craft Conference: Making Con nections,” at Montclair State College. For details, consult CM February Itinerary. April 6 registra tion deadline. Contact: Hortense Green, Crafts Coordinator, New Jersey State Council on the Arts, 109 W. State St., CN 306, Trenton 08625; or call: (609) 292-6130. Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh April 30-May 1 The American Ceramic Society’s annual meeting will focus on “History and Prehistory of Ceramic Art, Science and Technology.” Registration fee: $30. Contact: American Ceramic Society, 65 Ceramic Dr., Columbus, Ohio 43214; or call: (614) 2688645. Solo Exhibitions Arkansas, Russellville March 1-31 Janet Donnangelo, stoneware pottery; at Russellville Art Center, 1008 W. Main St. California, Encinitas March 1-15 Gwenn Truax, “Setting Pretty,” tableware with engobe and sgraffito decoration; at Offtrack Gallery, 510 N. Hwy. 101. California, Santa Barbara through March 15 Ann Mallory Stearns, salt-glazed stoneware; at Arlington Gallery, 1324 State St. Indiana, Indianapolis March 6-31 Beth Changstrom, porcelain vases and platters; at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, 1200 W. 38 St. Maryland, Baltimore March 2-23 Vera Baney, sculpture; at the Gallery, 800 S. Rolling Rd. Minnesota, Minneapolis through March 30 Christine Federighi, sculpture; at By Design, Lumber Exchange, 10 S. Fifth St. New Mexico, Santa Fe March 24-April 21 Avra Leodas, stoneware vessels and wall reliefs; at the Art Gallery, Saint John’s College, Camino Cruz Blanca. New York, New York March 4-24 James Lawton, “Controlling Raku—New Forms, New Imagery.” March 31-April 26 Wayne Higby; at Greenwich House Pottery, 16 Jones St. North Carolina, Charlotte through April 15 Oscar Louis Bachelder, pottery produced from 1916 to 1935 in the “Omar Khayyam Pottery”; at the Mint Museum of History, 3500 Shamrock Dr. Oregon, Portland March 22-April 21 Frank Boyden, ceramics and lithographs; at Contempo rary Crafts Gallery, 3934 S.W. Corbett Ave. Rhode Island, Providence March 21-April 20 Allison Newsome, sculpture; at Solomon Hatch Gallery, 118 N. Main St. Group Exhibitions Alabama, Birmingham through March 13 “Tra ditional Pottery of Alabama”; at the Birmingham Museum of Art, 2000 Eighth Ave., N. Arizona, Mesa March 12-30 “6th Annual Vahki Competition,” regional multimedia exhi bition; at Galeria Mesa, 155 N. Center St. Arizona, Phoenix through March 11 “Mimbres Pottery: Ancient Art of the American Southwest”; at the Heard Museum, 22 E. Monte Vista Rd. California, Claremont March 4-April 1 “The Scripps Clay Connection,” works by former stu dents and faculty; at Scripps College. California, Los Angeles through March 17 “Earthforms ’84”; at Loyola Marymount Uni versity’s Art Gallery, Loyola Blvd. at W. 80 St. California, Oakland through March 5 An ex hibition of ceramic vessels and sculpture by the Association of San Francisco Potters; at Holy Names College, 3500 Mountain Blvd. California, Redding through March 25 Chris Yates, thrown and handbuilt porcelain; at Redding Museum and Art Center, Caldwell Park. California, San Diego through March 25 An nual juried “San Diego Artists Guild All-Media Membership Exhibition”; at the San Diego Mu seum of Art, Balboa Park. California, San Francisco through March 7 A dual exhibition with Dick Studley, Egyptian paste vessels; at American Artforms Gallery at NeimanMarcus, 150 Stockton St. through March 15 A dual exhibition with Rob ert Arneson, sculpture; at Fuller Goldeen Gallery, 228 Grant Ave. California, Sunnyvale March 16-April 14 An exhibition by the Association of San Francisco Pot ters; at Creative Arts Center Gallery, 550 E. Rem ington. California, Westlake Village through March 30 A dual exhibition with Patrick Crabb, vessels; at the Retreat Gallery, 3865 E. Thousand Oaks Blvd. Colorado, Golden through March 27 “Col orado Clay Exhibition”; at the Foothills Art Cen ter, 809 Fifteenth St. Colorado, Grand Junction March 3-April 8 Sixth annual “WomanArt West”; at Western Col orado Center for the Arts, 1803 N. Seventh St. Connecticut, Greenwich March 21-April 21 A trimedia exhibition with Nick Bernard; at the Ele ments Gallery, 14 Liberty Way. Connecticut, New Haven through March 18 A dual show with Chris Richard, pottery; at the Cre ative Arts Workshop, 80 Audubon St. D.C., Washington through April 1 “Art of Az tec Mexico: Treasures of Tenochtitlan”; at Na tional Gallery of Art, Fourth St. at Constitution Ave. through June 17 “Clay for Walls: Surface Reliefs by American Artists”; at Renwick Gallery, Penn sylvania Ave. at 17th St., NW. March 10-31 A multimedia exhibition with Dick Studley, Egyptian paste vessels; at Jackie Chalkley, Foxhall Square, 3301 New Mexico Ave., NW. March 11-30 Jean Cohen and Tim Mather; at the American Hand, 2906 M Street, NW. Florida, Belleair March 23-April 22 “Ce ramics: Southeast” juried exhibition; at the Florida Gulf Coast Art Center, 222 Ponce de Leon Blvd. Florida, Miami March 16-April 9 “Ceramic League 34th Annual Members Exhibition,” juried show; at Barbara Gillman Gallery II, 3886 Biscayne Blvd. Florida, Pensacola March 9-30 “Pensacola National Portrait Exhibition,” juried competition; at Pensacola Junior College Visual Arts Gallery, 1000 College Blvd. Florida, South Miami March 23-April 30 “Florida Artists,” includes works by Shiiko Alex ander; at Netsky Gallery, 5759 Sunset Dr. Georgia, La Grange March 9-31 “La Grange National IX” juried exhibition; at Lamar Dodd Art Center, La Grange College. Idaho, Pocatello March 2-30 “Biennial Crafts III” juried exhibition; at Davis Gallery, Idaho State University. Illinois, Chicago March 16-April 20 “Mid west/Southwest Exchange,” New Mexico ce ramics; at Lill Street Gallery, 1021 W. Lill St. Illinois, Highland Park through March 29 Linda Schusterman and Alan Willoughby, highfired polychrome porcelain. March 31-May 2 “The Cup Invitational,”; at Martha Schneider Gallery, 124 S. Deere Park Dr. Iowa, Ames March 22-April 29 “Women in Clay: The Ongoing Tradition” exhibition and symposium includes “Six Over Sixty” with Laura Andreson, Ruth Duckworth, Vivika Heino, Lucy Lewis, Santana Martinez and Beatrice Wood; and “The Continuum” with Christina Bertoni, Jamie Fine, Karen Karnes, Sally Bowen Prange and Elsa Rady; plus historical works; at the Octagon Center for the Arts, Fifth and Douglas. Iowa, Iowa City March 31-May 6 “Medieval and Renaissance Ceramics from the Kassebaum Collection,” 60 examples of glazed earthenware; at the University of Iowa Museum of Art, Riv erside Dr. Louisiana, Hammond through March 16 “Lou isiana Crafts Council’s 17th Annual Craft Com petition”; at the Clark Hall Art Gallery, South eastern Louisiana University. Louisiana, New Orleans through March 25 “Auspicious Spirits,” Korean folk paintings and related objects; at the New Orleans Museum of Art, City Park, Lelong Ave. Massachusetts, Boston through June 3 “Di rections in Contemporary American Ceramics,” approximately 50 works by 15 artists; at the Mu seum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave. March 1-May 30 “Ban Chiang: Discovery of a Lost Bronze Age” (see CM November 1983); at the Museum of Sciences, Science Park. March 23-April 14 “Massachusetts Clay,” works by Harriet Goodwin, John Heller, Thomas Hoadley, Judy Motzkin, Dick Studley and Robert Woo; at Signature, Dock Square, North St. Massachusetts, Hyannis March 23-April 14 “Massachusetts Clay,” works by Harriet Goodwin, John Heller, Thomas Hoadley, Judy Motzkin, Dick Studley and Robert Woo; at Signature, the Village Market Place, Stevens St. Massachusetts, Lexington through September 9 “Unearthing New England’s Past: The Ceramic Evidence,” shards and whole objects from the 17th to 19th centuries found in archaeological excava tions; at the Museum of Our National Heritage, 33 Marret Rd. Massachusetts, Milton through April 22 “The Manner of Making Porcelain: The Dimsdale Gouaches,” 24 paintings illustrating porcelain production; at the China Trade Museum, 215 Ad ams St. Michigan, Dearborn through March 9 A dual Continued March 1984 21 22 CERAMICS MONTHLY Itinerary exhibition with Elizabeth Lurie, porcelain; at the Fine Arts Gallery, Henry Ford Community Col lege, 5101 Evergreen Rd. Michigan, Detroit through March 6 John and Susanne Stephenson, works from 1963 to 1984; at Pewabic Pottery, 10125 E. Jefferson Ave. through March 24 “Wealth of the Ancient World: The Nelson Bunker Hunt and William Herbert Hunt Collections,” includes 15 Greek and Roman vases; at the Detroit Institute of Arts, 5200 Wood ward Ave. Michigan, Lathrup Village March 10-31 A dual exhibition with Rick Foris, raku; at Venture Gallery, 28235 Southfield Rd. Mississippi, Jackson through March 11 “An cient Inspirations/Contemporary Interpreta tions”; at the Mississippi Museum of Art, Pascogoula at Lamar. Missouri, Saint Louis through May 20 “Amer ican Folk Art from Missouri Collections”; at the Saint Louis Art Museum, Forest Park. New Hampshire, Manchester March 17-April 26 “Third New Hampshire Crafts Biennial” ju ried exhibition; at the Manchester Institute of Arts and Sciences, 148 Concord St. New Jersey, East Hanover through March 28 Selected works by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts 1984 fellowship winners; at Nabisco Gallery, 100 Deforest Ave. New Jersey, Trenton through April 15 “The Diversions of Keramos”; at the New Jersey State Museum, 205 W. State St. New Mexico, Albuquerque March 4-30 “Clay, Fiber and Wood ’84”; at the Fine Arts Gal lery, New Mexico State Fairgrounds. New York, New York through March 10 A dual exhibition with George Timock, double-walled bowls. March 15-April 7 Ted Randall, largescale vessels; and Nancy Selvin, teabowls; at Ele ments Gallery, 90 Hudson St. through May 12 “Silk Roads/China Ships,” ap proximately 400 objects illustrating 2000 years of commerce between Asia and the West; at the American Museum of Natural History, Central Park W. at 79th St. through September 5 “New Yorkers’ Taste: Chinese Export Porcelain, 1750-1865,” ware cus tom-made for prominent New York families; at the Museum of the City of New York, Fifth Ave. at 103rd St. New York, Rochester March 17-April 28 “Introspectives” national juried exhibition of works by women artists; at Pyramid Arts Center, 163 Saint Paul St. New York, White Plains March 10-28 Mamaroneck Artists Guild “Annual Open Juried Ex hibition”; at the Community Unitarian Church, Rosedale Ave. Ohio, Cleveland through June 3 “Highlights of the Rococo: Norweb Ceramics and Related Arts”; at the Cleveland Museum of Art, 11150 East Blvd. Oregon, Portland through March 17 “In ternational Teaparty” juried exhibition of func tional and nonfunctional teapots and service in all media; at Contemporary Crafts, 3934 S.W. Cor bett Ave. Pennsylvania, Bethlehem March 15-April 28 “Soup Soup Beautiful Soup” juried exhibition of tureens; at Historic Bethlehem, 501 Main St. Pennsylvania, Lancaster March 3-25 “Gallery Show ’84,” third annual statewide competition; at the Market House Craft Center, Queen and Vine Streets. Pennsylvania, Philadelphia March 18-May 13 “Dutch Tiles,” approximately 1500 tiles from 1570 to 1850; at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Park way at 26th St. Rhode Island, Providence March 20-April 15 “Innovations in Clay and Glass 1984” invitational exhibition; at Bannister Gallery, Rhode Island College, 600 Mt. Pleasant Ave. March 30-June 24 Chris Gustin, Andrew Lord, Philip Maberry, Mark Pharis, Adrian Saxe, Ian Symons and Arnie Zimmerman, “RISD Clay In vitational”; at the Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, 224 Benefit St. Tennessee, Gatlinburg March 2-April 21 “Surface Enrichment: Color and Pattern” invita tional exhibition, includes work by Curt and Suzan Benzie, Rick Foris, Susan Icove and Karen Koblitz; at Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts. Tennessee, Murfreesboro March 5-April 6 “Currents ’84” biennial crafts competition; at the Art Barn Gallery, Middle Tennessee State Uni versity. Texas, Corpus Christi through March 10 “Contemporary Ceramics,” works by Rick Dil lingham, Wayne Higby, Greg Reuter, Bill Wilhelmi and Betty Woodman; at Carancahua Gal lery, 525 S. Carancahua. Texas, Houston March 16-July 9 “Treasures from the Shanghai Museum: 6000 Years of Chinese Art” (see CM January features); at the Museum of Fine Arts, 1001 Bissonnet. Texas, San Angelo through March 16 “Ceramic Competition ’84,” six-state regional show; at the Houston Harte Center Gallery, Angelo State Uni versity. Texas, San Marcos March 20-April 13 Robert Lyon and W. Steve Rucker, sculpture; at the Southwest Texas State University Gallery. Utah, Ogden through March 9 “Tenth An nual Ceramics Invitational”; at the Department of Art Gallery, Weber State College. Virginia, Charlottesville through April 20 “Dynamic Dimensions,” includes Gene Kleinsmith, platters and sculpture; at Gallery II R.S.VP., 218 W. Main St. Fairs, Festivals and Sales Arizona, Scottsdale March 30-April 1 “Scotts dale Center for the Arts Festival 15”; at Scottsdale Center for the Arts, 7383 Scottsdale Mall. Florida, Tampa March 3-4 The 14th annual “Gasparilla Sidewalk Art Festival”; at Doyle Carl ton Dr., downtown. Georgia, Atlanta March 17-20 “Craft Fair Atlanta ’84”; at the Atlanta Market Center. Michigan, Traverse City March 10-11 “In vitational Fine Art Fair”; at Park Place Dome, 300 E. State St. New York, New York March 9, April 6 and 27 “The Fourth International Clay Film Festival”; at the Greenwich House Pottery, 16 Jones St. Pennsylvania, Harrisburg March 9-11 “Penn sylvania National Arts and Crafts Show”; at State Farm Show Building. Texas, Houston March 24-April 1 “The Houston Festival,” 13th annual juried art and craft fair; at Sam Houston Park, downtown. Texas, McAllen March 17-18 The Ceramics International Association’s 11th annual “Fiesta on the Border”; at the McAllen Civic Center. Workshops California, Berkeley March 24-25 Catharine Hiersoux, porcelain workshop with emphasis on wheel throwing, design and decoration. Fee: $65, includes lunch. Limited registration. Contact: Ca tharine Hiersoux, 437 Colusa Ave., Berkeley 94707; or call: (415) 524-8005. California, Mendocino March 17-18 Beth Changstrom, “Pottery Surface Enrichment,” dem onstrations on airbrushing, stenciling and draw ing, plus slide lecture. Fee: $45. Contact: Tony Marsh, Mendocino Art Center, Box 765, Men docino 95460; or call: (707) 937-5818 or 937-0946. California, Santa Cruz March 31-April 1 Al Johnsen, “Slab Building and the Extruder as a Design Tool,” hands-on experience. Fee: $85, in cludes clay. April 28-29 “Teapot Workshop,” techniques for form and function. Fee: $85, in cludes clay. Contact: Adrianne Van Gelder, Uni versity of California, Extension Office, Santa Cruz 95064; or call: (408) 429-2971. California, Sunnyvale March 31 Mayer Shacter, slide lecture and demonstration. Contact: Libby Page, Sunnyvale Community Center, Box 60607, Sunnyvale 94088; or call: (408) 738-5521. California, Walnut Creek April 7 Eunice Prieto, “Salt Glaze Workshop.” April 14-15 Juta Savage and Kuzuye Suyematsu, “Porcelain Decoration Workshop.” Contact: Mark Mc Kinnon, 1313 Civic Drive, Walnut Creek 94596; or call: (415) 943-5848. Colorado, Denver April 7-8 Kurt Weiser workshop in conjunction with the exhibition “En vironments.” Contact: Cohen Gallery, 665 S. Pearl St., Denver 80209; or call: (303) 431-3080. Connecticut, Brookfield March 31-April 1 Bill Van Gilder, “Press Molding for Table ware.” April 6 Cynthia Bringle, “Special Workshop for Potters.” Maximum: 30 partici pants. April 7-8 Marvin Bjurlin, “Coil Throwing and Double-Walled Vessels.” Contact: Brookfield Craft Center, Box 122, Brookfield 06804; or call (203) 775-4526. Connecticut, New Haven March 17-18 Chris Richard, “Throwing and Constructing Large Scale Forms with Stoneware.” Fee: $45. Contact: The Creative Arts Workshop, 80 Audubon St., New Haven 06511; or call: (203) 562-4927. Illinois, Palos Hills April 7 William Farrell, wheel throwing demonstration and slide lecture. Fee: $20, includes lunch. Contact: Moraine Valley Community College, 10900 S. 88 Ave., 1300 Bldg., Palos Hills 60465; or call: (312) 974-4300. Kansas, Wichita March 20-21 John Dyas, “Working with Porcelain and Zinc Crystalline Glazes,” participatory workshop. Contact: Dee Connett, Art Department, Friends University, 2100 University, Wichita 67213; or call: (316) 264-9661. Massachusetts, Boston March 28 Garth Clark, Doug Heller and Bernice Wolman, “Economics and Aesthetics in Contemporary Crafts,” panel discussion. Contact: Program in Artisanry, Boston University, 620 Commonwealth Ave., Boston 02215; or call: (617) 353-2022. Massachusetts, Worcester April 28-29 Bar bara Knutson, “Slab Construction,” demonstration and hands-on experience. Fee: $55 for members; $65, nonmembers. Contact: Worcester Craft Cen ter, 25 Sagamore Rd., Worcester 01605. New York, East Islip March 24-25 John Fink, a two-day session on design, construction, painting and airbrush decoration. Fee: $40. Up to 20 par ticipants. Contact: Islip Art Museum, 50 Irish Lane, East Islip 11730; or call: (516) 224-5402. New York, New York April 1 and 8 Elisa D’Arrigo, “Treatment of Ceramic Form Surfaces.” Contact: Janet Bryant, 92nd Street Y, 1395 Lex ington Ave., New York 10128; or call: (212) 4276000, ext. 162. March 23-24 James Lawton, slide lecture and demonstration. Contact: Greenwich House Pot tery, 16 Jones St., New York 10014; or call: (212) 242-4106. New York, Scarsdale April 29 Mikhail Zak in, “Raku,” a hands-on session; 4 medium-sized, bisqued forms required. Maximum: 8 partici pants. Fee: $40. Contact: YM-YWHA of MidWestchester, 999 Wilmot Rd., Scarsdale 10583; or call: (914) 472-3300. Ohio, Wooster April 5-7 “Functional Ce ramics Workshop,” with panelists Val Cushing, Tim Mather and Barbara Diduk, will include demonstrations, discussions and slide lectures. Contact: Phyllis Blair Clark, The College of Wooster, Wooster 44691; or call: (216) 263-2388. Pennsylvania, Lancaster March 24 and 31 Juan Quezada, coil building, burnishing and openair dung firing; 15 participants maximum. Fee: $45, includes materials. Send self-addressed, stamped business envelope to: Terri Willner, Mar ket House Craft Center, Box 552, Lancaster 17604; or call: (717) 295-1500 or 392-7797. Tennessee, Gatlinburg March 12-16 Walter Hyleck, “Color and the Porcelain Surface.” March 26-30 Karl Borgeson, “Raku.” Contact: Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts, Box 567, Gatlinburg 37738; or call: (615) 436-5860. Texas, Amarillo March 10-11 David Shaner, Please Turn to Page 88 March 1984 23 24 C eramics M onthly Comment Letter to a Young Potter by Dennis Parks “How CAN I make a living from ce ramics?” Yes, you’re right, it’s a familiar question. And you would think by now I’d have a ready answer. I don’t, though my first teacher Robert Howard did: “Try to starve to death in America. They’ll haul you off to a hospital, tie you down and force feed you. Don’t you know it’s against the law to starve?” His answer helped because it was ironic, it made me smile, and that was a beginning—but I know it’s not the answer you’re looking for. Last year, in an Australian craft shop, I overheard a local potter lamenting, “All the prices are too low. I can’t live off these. It’s the cegg-money potters.’ They’re going to kill us off.” He was referring to those potters who don’t rely entirely on sales for their livelihood. They’ll sell low in order to have a high turnover. Many are primarily interested in cov ering studio expenses and hoping to have a little extra. Low prices are a major problem. I agree. Figuring with the inflated dollar, retail prices for utilitarian ceramics are about the same today as they were 20 years ago. But it’s difficult for me to condemn outright the egg-money potter. How many potters support themselves completely from the sale of their work? How many more of us fall somewhere in the egg-money category? Each time I become better acquainted with a renowned potter (whom I’d as sumed was living comfortably from sales) I soon learn of a part-time job or a full time professorship with a light teaching load; or I’m introduced to a spouse with a dedication to working 9 to 5; or I’m told of a small family legacy that helps out. I’ve never met a serious potter who supports the family with a single source of income. The answer may be that one must diversify in order to survive. That isn’t, I realize, a very specific answer to your “How can I make a liv ing?” question. There have to be a lot of ways. Most of my generation teach. In academe there are of course the timeconsuming aggravations of faculty meet ings, committee meetings, office hours and students, but the campus offers a steady, middle-class income, summer va cations, etc. And for the tenured few, a professorship assures security to the grave. When I was granted an M.F.A. in the mid ’60s, there were teaching positions to choose from. You could pick an in stitution that had the climate you liked best. Now, in the 1980s, there are fewer students who in turn need fewer instruc tors. The fresh graduate today may fall into a teaching job, but you can’t real istically make it your goal. A few potters edit magazines or manufacture pottery equipment. Very few! Marry well is an ancient solution. Marry money or a spouse who loves to work. The option may sound facetious or crass, but it’s definitely the oldest and most certain resolution for financial in security. Live cheaply. We Americans are spoiled. When you wring your hands about making a living, you’ve more in mind than a roof over your head, a dry floor and a table set for one. By lowering my expectations I’ve discovered that a lot of my “basic needs” have become merely delightful, occasional extrava gances. Much literature exists on studio efficiency and economies. When prac ticed within reason many of these howto-save hints are prudent. Lowering ba sic costs definitely reduces the demand for income. There’s nothing any of us would like Continued March 1984 25 26 CERAMICS MONTHLY Comment years, out of restlessness, we moved to California. I set up a studio near Mon terey and wholesaled my ware. Julie got a job in another hospital. Still we needed more cash. I worked part time as a clerk in a gallery, as a gardener watering or chids, as a substitute junior high teacher and as a paper grader at the high school. This wasn’t doing what I wanted to do. I decided to try the college teaching game. Though I’d been reared on the dictum “Those who can, do; those who can’t, teach,” I resolved to try joining the club without really becoming “one of the boys.” I applied to graduate school, and Julie applied for a job at a nearby hos pital. Subsequently I taught six years at two different colleges, and received pro motions, faculty grants and a tenure of fer. Julie continued to work, as it seemed impossible to live on just a teacher’s sal ary (and the more infrequent sale of my work). I was given a sabbatical for a semester, then I requested a year’s leave of absence. Finally I resigned. That was 12 years ago. How do I make a living now? I’m puzzled by forms like a passport appli cation with the short blank space for oc cupation. Should I write potter, teacher, lecturer, writer, vegetable gardener, rab bit breeder, deer hunter, trout fisher man? Or maybe just the single job clas sification “potter” implies all the rest. Today Julie and I live in a modestly comfortable fashion in the boondocks. No mortgages; no plastic cards. Julie re tired her R.N. at the time I packed away my M.F.A. Luck may be what keeps us going. Curious that you never find the word “luck” in any definition of security. Was my biggest stroke of luck a boom in the real estate market just when I sold my home in California? If the predicted earthquake doesn’t drop Los Angeles County into the ocean, I can depend on a monthly mortgage check until Feb ruary 2013. Or was my luck in marrying well: a working wife who tolerated a husband with no economic ambitions? Lots of unanticipated good fortune came along the way. For me answers are hard er to find than luck. I heard a quote attributed to baseball figure Branch Rickey: “Luck is the res idue of design.” That might be an an swer. to do so much as sell well. Make what our inner vision urges (what we like), sell to an eager public (at a respectable price) and make a living (at the level we’re accustomed to). This is the path most young potters look for. I must ad mit that I’ve glanced at this road and have never seen a soul on it. I’ve met potters who believe they have found the map. They developed skills for produc ing rapidly and efficiently; they make a large volume of well-crafted, finished and popular items; they refocus with changes in public taste (bright colors when they’re in vogue, raku if it goes well, porcelain or salt glaze, vessels or objet d’art). In terior design galleries and living room art collectors help them. This is realistic, but then you prob ably want to be a romantic about it. “How can I make a living (doing what I want to do)?” I know the parenthetical phrase is always there. Otherwise why would intelligent, college-educated folks be come entangled in such an insecure, un profitable occupation? Look around. There are no rich and famous potters. The rules in economics are that others pay for services that they can’t or don’t want to do, and purchase what they need and/or like. Sometimes what the potter wants to make and what the public wants to buy will coincide. Sometimes not. To follow the public too closely will not lead to doing what you want to do. I know your next question. Every time I’ve reached this point in similar dis cussions I am challenged rather petu lantly with “Well, how did you make it?” Not bravely, cleanly, consistently nor quickly—but satisfactorily. I began making pots to support myself as a poet. Not a brilliantly thought-out nor wellresearched scheme. These are certainly two of the least valued and rewarded occupations. It would have made more common sense to become a poet/pharmacist or poet/C.P.A., but at 23 I was concocting what I thought might grow into a well-balanced, nutritious life. It was not long before I noticed that I was no longer sitting down to write. All my time was devoted to scratching out a potter’s living. My wife Julie was employed off and on as a full-time reg istered nurse. In rapid succession we had two sons. This was at my first studio in Washington, D.C., where I sold retail The author Dennis Parks maintains from my gallery and taught adult edu a studio and pottery school in Tuscarora, cation classes nights. After a couple of Nevada. March 1984 27 28 Ceramics Monthly Collaboration COLLABORATIVE raku and salt-fired River. Until 1982 their collaborations vessels were among the works recently were raku fired, then they built a kiln shown by New York ceramists Nancee to salt glaze the ware for greater “visual Meeker and Jane Hollenberg at Ten clarity of surface and form.” The new Arrow Gallery in Cambridge, Massa salt-glazed “joint efforts” combine Nan chusetts. Jane has shared studio and kiln cee’s thrown classical forms with Jane’s space with Nancee since 1973; they now handbuilt animalistic and figurative em work at Nancee’s farm on the Hudson bellishments. Photos: courtesy of Ten Arrow Gallery Nancee Meeker unbricks the salt-kiln door at her studio on an old farm near the Hudson River, New York. The kiln shed (which opens on all sides) was designed for flexibility in ventilation and wind control. March 1984 29 Above Raku-fired vase, 20 inches in height, thrown by Nancee Meeker, with fish handles by Jane Hollenberg. Left Jane Hollenberg adjusts a figurative maquette on one oj Nancee's thrown forms. Their collaborative works are either raku fired or salt glazed. 30 CERAMICS MONTHLY A Ceramics Monthly Portfolio T E X T B Y H E N R Y V A R N U M P O O R ( 1 8 8 7 - 1 9 7 0 ) Henry Varnum Poor holding an unfinished lamp base for the Rockefeller Center; 1932. He was among the first modern American studio potters. Overleaf Self-Portrait Plate * thrown, 8½ inches in diameter; earthenware with incised slip, 1940. A Ceramics Monthly Portfolio No author is needed to speak for or about Henry Varnum Poor. He wrote with eloquence and his words have met the test of time. Rooted in the great American prairieland, Poor studied at the same source as Bernard Leach—the Slade School of Art, London. After fur ther training in Paris, he returned to the United States, first to teach painting at Stanford University and at the San Francisco Art Association, then moving to New York in 1919 to launch a presti gious studio career in ceramics. Ed. — In art there is no perfection, nor even a universal image of perfection. Individuals have set images of perfection for them selves, but the images come to an end with that individual. And wherever an image of perfection did dominate the whole production of a people or a school, the result was a sterility like that of the late Greek periods, as shown both in their sculpture and their pottery. Art is continually reborn and revivified, and can build on inherited knowledge and tradi tion only to a limited extent. Even the painting of Cezanne, which seemed so reasonable, so reasoned, so much a lad der leading to greater perfection, has not truly served as a ladder, for what was continued in its image became dead. Science, on the other hand, sets a goal—the perfection of knowledge, the all-knowing. The oceanographer hopes eventually to find out all there is to know about the floor of the ocean. The chemist hopes to make the perfect substance. The perfect porcelain is the goal of the indus trial porcelain factory. Thus the so-called fine arts must al ways stay close to the crafts, where ob viously the material is of first impor tance. Perhaps the distinction between fine arts and applied arts could be made on some rough ratio between spirit and material. Certainly much painting and sculpture is pure exercise in craftsman ship, while many simple objects of clay and wood and metal reveal the most lofty spirit. Pottery is earth begotten; but the most powerful of all catalysts, heat, frees it from being earthbound. After the potter has done his best with his material, heat works its miracles until the results far transcend the creator. I know of no other art, no other technique, where this is true. Heat and growth and equally mirac ulous forces have conspired to produce the stone and wood, metals and colors that are the materials of all the arts. When man has done his best with them, he carefully protects the result. Only the potter trusts his completed work to God or the Devil for its final perfection or de struction. In the arts of all primitive people there are astonishing similarities, and particu larly so in pottery. If the way of life and the materials at hand were in close corre spondence, then the natives of the Congo, the Indians of Mexico and Peru, the ear ly Cretans and Persians, and the prehis toric Chinese, all did work that was much more alike, much more akin in both outward form and inner spirit, than is the work of two different artists who might be showing simultaneously in New York’s 57th Street galleries today, al though these two painters might be of the same age, live in the same building, read the same books and newspapers, and buy their paint and canvas from the same shop. The likenesses in work sepa rated by thousands of years and by un known continents certainly show that men were so alike in physical and spiritu al needs that they evolved the same forms and the same decorations and much the same symbolic imagery. The present-day differences result from many and complicated disruptive forces. Conformity in our lives leads to a false emphasis upon differences and originality as an assertion of freedom. From an imagined retrospective view of 3000 years hence, similarities which now we do not see will probably appear much great er. At any rate, the paintings will be on much the same canvas and with much the same paints and will have been paint ed with much the same self-conscious motivation, the same lack of unity with our everyday life. But I don’t think 3000 years can bring forward much similarity between a realistically modeled marble nude and a welded abstract construction in sheet iron, which might today be in cluded in the same exhibition of Contem porary Art. In the arts based on clay transmuted by fire—the ceramic arts—the materials at hand and the techniques involved have played a leading part in forming tradi tion. The Chinese had kaolin and whiteburning clays and feldspar, and what they did with these became a tradition that profoundly influenced the art of ce ramics throughout the world. The Etrus cans knew and loved their red clay, the slippery mud that oozed up between their bare toes; and they learned to build im ages of it and depict their whole life through it. They were laid away in cas kets made of it, with images of them selves lying in immortal state over their own mortal flesh. They delighted in the mystery of firing this red mud and ma nipulating the fire to get a glossy black: the Bucchero ware which still de fies science to duplicate it. So they made a terra-cotta civilization. The Persians, imitating the Chinese whiteware, used their own coarse sandy clays overlaid with a white slip, and decorated their pots with such brilliance under fat soda and potash glazes that they give us a de light of an entirely different sort. Italian and Moorish majolica, Delft enameled ware, early English earthenware and stoneware and slipware—all the ceramic things we most love—speak of a time, a place, a people, a way of life. For us, now, what is our tradition? In our homes, as much as we can, we live with things we love from all places and all times. If we cannot own them (and generally we cannot), we gloat over them as reproduced in books and in museums. We inherit all traditions and are part of what? When we go to buy cups and plates and bowls—the things we use and spend our lives with, the common things—we get sanitary, cold, mechani cally perfect machine-made objects, per haps well designed by some efficient in dustrial designer. Must we accept this as our tradition? In all honesty it is the American tradition in ceramics—good, even perfect, sanitary hotel china. This is the voice of our way of life, and it speaks in precise, cold, impersonal tones of fac tories, machines and mass production. We must face the fact that this is our common voice, and if we are not in tune and are not content to be in tune, our problem becomes one of finding quiet and detachment to develop and perfect our own little voices. And how escape the self-conscious individualism, the un healthy too-long-indulged introspection, which has become the role of the artist? Sophisticated primitivism is a very tricky role for the artist to play in his attempt to recapture the singleness of other sim pler civilizations. In pottery, the return must be made through closer, warmer touch with our materials. But in our shops we have all materials; in our schools and textbooks and workshops we have command of all techniques. We can buy any and all perfect glazes to fit any perfect body, put them into an electric kiln, turn a switch, and fire them to ex actly the right temperature. So all that is lacking is good design and there are many books and teachers to tell what good design is—so, where is the perfect pottery? It would seem that the living quality of a piece of pottery hangs on a delicate balance. Technical perfection cannot give life to dead forms and dry design. Only love can create a living thing; knowledge is not enough. To know exactly how a clay acts and what its qualities are is not the same by any means as loving it into life and nursing it through the mysteries and uncertainties of firing. One of my great loves when I started doing pottery was Persian pottery, and the technique of working on a white slip, which I took from the Persians, has re mained, through various modifications, my greatest love. It offers the freest and richest medium of expression for informal A Ceramics Monthly Portfolio draftsmanship and pictorial decoration; and since I was most in love with paint ing and drawing, I started doing pottery for the pleasure of decorating it. In the pottery of the Persians it is the universality of the tradition, the very commonness of the work, which plays an essential part in forming its fresh, vigor ous character. This attitude toward their work on the part of the potters charmed me. I valued the three scars of the stilts on even the most beautiful plates and bowls, showing they were stacked in tiers, as a finer trademark than an artist’s sig nature. My first ambition was to produce beautiful, common and anonymous ware, and to sell it cheaply. I wanted to flood the market with it so that people would rush to buy, knowing only that it came from “that pottery up the Hudson near Haverstraw.” The body of this ware would be that blue clay of the Hudson Valley, where were made the common red bricks with which early New York City was built. This ideal has been abandoned, and largely through economic pressure—the poison that destroys more ideals than any other killer. I had named my house and pottery “Crowhouse”; had cut out a stamp for a trademark. ^ Inever signed my work, but with my first ven ture into taking orders by the dozens from the Belle Maison Gallery at Wanamaker’s, I realized I must either become a small factory and have helpers, or stick to my solitude and ask higher prices. The latter is what happened. But that original ideal has remained extremely important in my work. When I work at pottery, I do it always with a feeling for quantity production. I turn it out rapidly instead of lingering over each piece. I decorate a dozen plates at one stretch, and as I pick up each plate I have no idea of what is going on it, ex cept that it must be a free expression of something I believe in. I stack plates and tiles and bowls densely in tiers in the kiln, with little shelving; nothing to in sure against warping or being scarred by the stilts. All of this is, I recognize, perhaps a futile attempt to combat the sterile preciousness of the “artist potter”—a hateful term. Since there is no tradition, I want ed to create one of my own and work in it in community with the great traditions of the past. To make your own valid tradition I think you must have, above all, the har dihood to establish and maintain a way of life, and this must involve a closer, warmer relation to your materials and, as an image maker, a life lived in close con tact with the things from which you want to evolve symbols and images. The bird you may evolve to fit a pot may be very like a Persian bird; but if you have ar rived at it through your own knowledge of birds, through your own drawings and attempts to summarize what you know and see, its differences from an adapted Persian bird mark the difference between something trite and something alive. Character, a quality beyond words or analysis, is the very first quality in good design, and any design that sacrifices character to any imagined rightness, any conformity to law, is no longer good de sign. From the land back of my pottery in Rockland County, New York, I dug earth from about 6 inches below the surface to get it fairly free from roots, leaf mold and other obvious organic substances. It was a yellow, rather sandy soil, not claylike or plastic in feeling. I put some of it through a ½-inch-mesh sieve and mea sured out 1 gallon of this earth which had been separated from its biggest peb bles. This gallon of earth I stirred into 3 gallons of water, making a thin, yellow soup, which I poured through a ½-inchmesh sieve. About one pint of pebbles re mained on the sieve. On a '/16-inch-mesh sieve rather more than a pint of sharp clean sand remained. Through a 40-mesh sieve about half of the remaining soup passed. This I allowed to settle overnight; then I siphoned off the clear water and poured the heavy creamy remainder into a plaster bat. This process resulted in a clay that was plastic enough to be thrown into simple forms on the wheel. At Cone 05 it made a pleasant, sandy-textured, terra-cotta red body, perfectly strong and durable. It was rich and glossy under a simple raw glaze. It would make fine kitchen casseroles for baking. I am not a geologist, nor am I interest ed in mapping out clay distribution, but wherever I drive and find clay exposed in roadside cuts I gather it, carry it home and, when I find time, make some simple bowls. Then in my imagination I can see the beautiful and useful things which could come from that region, could uniquely characterize the place through its deviations from the accepted and stan dardized products of industrial ceramic plants. This sort of regionalism we have unfortunately left behind, and in doing so have lost more than we have gained. Who with a sense of taste would not gladly exchange our packaged and uni versally marketed bread, properly “vita min enriched,” for the loaves from ovens of any French or Italian town, made from the villagers’ own wheat? Art is an expression of each person’s rediscovery of the universe. To produce a living and vital art this discovery must begin close to the beginning, or the result is only a synthetic art. The beginning for pottery is clay. Earth I am, it is most true Disdain me not, for so are you. This motto on an old English plate ex presses the spirit which motivated a whole national period of pot making in England. And although later English ce ramic products, such as Wedgwood, Toft, Staffordshire, Chelsea, and Bow, became famous the world over for perfection of technique and distinctive style, this work never soared so high into realms of pure and expressive form as did the rugged pots of those early English potters. So the love of clay, through as personal an experience as may still be possible in this nervous, rushing, industrialized, pres ent-day America, is the most important starting point for everyone who has the urge to make pottery. This is why I tell of digging it up in my own back yard. I like to call it mud to emphasize its uni versality and to emphasize that the most common may be the richest materials from which to make rare and beautiful objects. You can go to a supply house and buy clay, dug, refined, tested and ready for use. You will know that thou sands of others are using that same clay, and that it is safe; and if this is comfort ing, reflect too that thousands of others in their standardized kilns are going to turn out very much the same standard ized product as you are. Then ask your self, do you really want to do this? If the answer is no, please explore your own neighborhood for beds of clay, dig it, and subject yourself to the experience of knowing that it is earth and not a syn thetic paste or powder made up of God knows what. And for your clay, character again is much more important than any supposed perfection. Clays are like wines, in that part of their flavor comes from the wine maker’s knowledge of the hillsides and vineyards that grew the grapes. So if you can’t dig clay in your own back yard, try to get it locally. It does not have to be perfect—its limitations and imperfections may help you. As for techniques, try to master one and use it with invention and skill; you may find that it will keep you going all your life. The simplicity we need is not the ineptness of amateurism. It is a technical simplicity which puts the chief emphasis upon fine form, skilled craftsmanship and living, expressive design. Of the accumu lation of the art of all ages with which we live, the multiplicity of techniques and materials, you must be content to leave a great deal alone. It will be a long time, perhaps never again, before this complex pattern of life becomes clear and single. The directions you follow must be your own, and the work you do may be incomplete and fragmentary. But it will give you endless pleasure in doing, and it may live, if you can be true to your own lump of clay and to the fire that makes it immortal. Henry Varnum Poor's self-built studio, New City>, New York. Images in this article are from the retro spective exhibition, “Henry Varnum Poor, 1887—1970, which originated at the Pennsylvania State University, and is currently traveling. I I Ceramic tile bathroom for the American Designers’ Gallery exhibition, 1928, later installed in the artist's home. The nude reflected in the mirror is one wall of a shower stall; light fixtures are of pierced tile. A Ceramics Monthly Portfolio Top left “Plate with Dogs,” approximately 9 inches in diameter; 1933. All Henry Varnum Poor's ceramic works are earthenware (in most cases, local clays from the vicinity of the artist's home) coated with white slip, then completed with sgraffito, colored slips and lead glaze. Top center “Plate with Landscape,” approximately 9 inches in diameter; 1923. Top right “Plate with Grapes ,” 10 inches in diameter,; thrown, 1970. At one show earlier in his career; Poor “enraged potters by showing warped and even kiln-cracked plates because [he] considered them works of art. ” Above Scenes of Academy Life,” tile mural, Hillson Memorial Gallery, Deerfield Academy, Massachusetts, 1955. A Ceramics Monthly Portfolio Top left “Sports,” ceramic tile mural for the Athletic Club of the Hotel Shelton, New York City, 1927 (since destroyed during renovation). Top center wElements of a Dining Alcove” included a pierced-tile radiator cover, wall tile flower plaques, and an earthenware luncheon set, in addition to the handbuilt table and paneling, by Henry Varnum Poor; 1929. Top right “Standing Crib Tiles,” 37 inches in height, chestnut with earthenware, for the artist’s son, 1926. Above left *Plate with Chrysanthemums and Pitcher” thrown, approximately 10 inches in diameter, 1921-24. Above "Plate with Melon and Squash,” 8 inches in diameter, lead-glazed earthenware, 1921-24. 1. “Bowl with Wolves Chasing Bull ,” 1957, wheel-thrown earthenware, slip with manganese sand, 4½ inches in diameter. 2. “Vase with Bathers ” 10½ inches in height, 1927, by Henry Varnum Poor. 3. “Jardiniere,” 14 inches in diameter, 1929, earthenware. 4. “Crow House,” earthenware knob from the front door of Poor's Hudson River Valley home. Though primarily a painter and ceramist, he designed and built his own house, as well as about a dozen others for friends and acquaintances. Poor's ceramic skills came into play in decorating windowsills, bathrooms, fireplaces and even smaller elements. Above “Nude with Alligator” 20½ inches in height, earthenware fountain, 1936. 1. “Plate with Bridge ,” 13 inches in diameter, 1955, earthenware. 2. “Plate with.Still Life of Pitcher and Melon,” 13 inches in diameter, 1931, 3. “Plate with Still Life of Decanter and Fruit,” 1931, glazed earthenware, 13 inches in diameter. 4. “Ten Nights in a Bar Room,” 20 inches in height, 1932, miniature stage set depicting a scene in a classic 19th-century temperance melodrama. Though he is best known for his pottery, Henry Varnum Poor constructed ceramic sculpture and reliefs, as well as a series of earthenware portrait busts. 5. “Plate with Sunflowers,” 8 inches in diameter, 1921-24, earthenware. 6. “Plate with Poseidon Slaying Serpent,” 8 inches in diameter, with slip, sgraffito, lead glaze, 1951. A Ceramics Monthly Portfolio Top left “Compote with Anniversary Commemoration ,” 14½ inches in diameter, 1932. The inscription reads uLove & Faith & Sometimes Even Clay Can Be as Golden as Purest Gold. ” Top center “Plate with Portrait of a Woman,” 8 inches in diameter, sandy local earthenware, 1922. Top right aPortrait Plate, Woman,” 11½ inches in diameter, wheel-thrown earthenware, slip, sgraffito, lead glaze, 1930. Above Relief tiles and pierced tile grill, underglaze painted earthenware, lead glaze, 1935. For this panel above the dining room fireplace in the home Henry Varnum Poor designed and built for Maxwell Anderson, the artist depicted himself (left) working and the Andersons sunbathing. Boston Mills Ceramics Fair POTTERS and clay sculptors from 15 states converged on the Boston Mills Ski Resort (Peninsula, Ohio) this past Sep tember to participate in an art fair with a new twist. Instead of limiting the per centage of ceramists allowed (as many current fairs do), the Boston Mills Fair consisted entirely of ceramists—97 in all. The concept of a media-specialized fair was developed by Peninsula, Ohio, artist Don Getz, who has directed the event both years of its existence. A “clay only” fair seems to work well for all concerned and offers great po tential for transplanting to other areas of the country. Getz mixes a number of other elements with the show to increase interest among craftsmen: clay seminars offered each evening after closing will be presented this year in the morning before the fair opens, and a juried ex hibition (with prize money) runs the du ration of the event. To increase the show’s visibility, a major newspaper in the re gion sponsors the fair in conjunction with a local charity, and a portion of the gate fee also benefits community services of the newspaper’s own charity fund. This combination of public service, charity and advertising adds to the overall “good guy” feeling about the event, which conse quently draws customers from the northeast Ohio region, including the nearest major population centers—Ak ron/Canton and Cleveland. 42 CERAMICS MONTHLY by William Hunt The Booth There is no doubt that the booth en vironment at any craft fair has some thing to do with sales, and booth design is becoming as competitive as clay forms and prices. The ideal booth exists some where in the outer reaches along with Plato’s forms, yet potters constantly strive to identify the elements that make a booth better: A good booth is functional. That means it can be easily set up and taken down (weight is an important factor), and looks good even after a great deal of use. Such a booth also is flexible enough to accom modate changes in available space (cor ner spaces tend to sell better), and allows for many lights in various positions to show work at its best sparkle. The booth may display a lot of work, yet should look acceptable whenever stock is low. One of the most important, but un derrated qualities of a great booth, is that it creates an environment, a special place different from the rest of the world. A good booth allows for comfortable social interaction (no confined entry, and can accommodate a variety of people even when one or two customers are simul taneously completing a transaction). Equally important, a successful booth contains an artist/craftsperson with an air that she or he is easy to talk to, in teresting, ready to help, and in a good mood. Get your eyes as close to eye level with customers for the most comfortable interaction. This can be accomplished with a tall stool, raised platform, etc. Even the best sales environment can’t overcome the presence of some works which are overpriced and tend to poison the customer’s belief that prices reflect real values in the various senses of that word. Matching the quality of the booth to the quality of the work to the pricing level is good visual communication which will increase sales. A great deal is known about the effect of color on sales, so don’t forget this im portant element of booth design. Some artists even coordinate their clothes colors with the sales environment. It can’t hurt, and perhaps it helps. In short, the same elements that pro duce a good retail store also produce a good booth. After a booth has been around to the point it begins to nag its owner, it is probably time to think about change. But a good booth does not necessarily trans late into an expensive booth nor into mimicking successful booths of others. With the same creativity applied to a sales environment as is applied to ce ramic work, a booth can pay for itself quite quickly and can be another source of pride for the artist/craftperson. Opposite page Santa Barbara, California, potter Tom Shafer designed a low-cost booth using cardboard file boxes for stock storage. Left There is a spacious feeling to Tony Menzer’s booth, constructed entirely of raw canvas and modular metal rod framing. A storage/office space (left background) can remain open (as shown here) or be enclosed. The canvas forms a light tent, softening reflections which might otherwise interfere with appreciating highly reflective crystal glazes, and warming the bluish cast of harsh daylight. This booth creates a special environment, distinct from the rest of the booths and from the fair clutter in general—important characteristics of an effective booth display. Marcia Armstrong’s booth is extremely flexible, accommodating this corner space (corner booths tend to sell better), or easily adaptable to any other size or configuration of display space. (The standard booth is 10 by 10 feet, although some fairs offer nonstandard sizes, the most common of which are 8 by 10 and 10 by 12 feet.) Marcia recognizes the monochromatic nature of her forms may require some additional color, so fresh flowers provide that focal point and add warmth without detracting from works in the upper range of fair prices. Many potters and ceramic sculptors avoid selling in fairs simply because they don’t own a suitable display system. But effective booths can be designed from a variety of materials, and in a style to suit nearly any kind of work. Current craft fairs are selling objects ranging in price from a few dollars to a few thousand dollars. So now, while most fairs are out of season, is a good time to think about booth design, whether you are entering fairs for the first time or are a “regular” looking to replace that old, wornout display. The booth of Robert Carlson (Princeton, Wisconsin) is about as minimal as sales environments get. A gallerylike setting can be seen increasingly at fairs today, particularly when works shown bear gallery price tags. Such a booth is a symbol of the preciousness of its pots, and invites the customer to look more closely, to investigate what makes these works special. March 1984 43 Ninety-seven potters and ceramic sculptors sold their wares at the Boston Mills Ceramics Fair held in Peninsula, Ohio, last September. Rushville, Ohio, ceramists Lenora Beale (shown) and Kathy Bachman designed a booth with track lighting mounted high enough to prevent glare and best show glazed surfaces of woven stoneware. Thoughtful lighting can make the difference between pots looking ordinary or looking great. A rustic setting is commonly used for stoneware, and therefore among the most difficult booth styles to handle with quality. Raye Salveson (right) and Sharon Gerbasi produce a consistently successful booth from old crates which suit their high-density, flexible approach to display. Plainly placed price tags can easily show a bargain, prompting impulse sales for increased profit. Eve Fleck’s straightforward approach of shelving around three sides of her booth gives customers easy access to a surprisingly large quantity of plainly visible ware. Varnished natural wood planks are a good contrast to stoneware, and the former won't show chips and mars the way painted surfaces do. A good booth need not be expensive; let materials already available to you dictate an interesting booth design in the same way that clay materials often dictate the design of pots. 44 CERAMICS MONTHLY Yosuke Haruta SLAB-BUILT and wheel-thrown stone ware by Yosuke Haruta was featured in a recent one-man show at the Gal lery in Bloomington, Indiana. Born in Fukuoka, Japan, Haruta moved to the United States in 1966, and subse quently established a pottery in Han over, Michigan, in 1973. by Pegram Harrison Although his work does not reflect any specific Japanese pottery refer ence, Haruta feels a close association with the craftsmen of the Momoyama period (A.D. 1573-1614) and looks to their traditions for inspiration. Some of his forms are reminscent of the or nate helmets of the Japanese warrior. These angular slab-built objects have inverted U-shaped bases suggestive of the once-useful headgear. The smooth surfaces are colored with blue and pale-to-white slips (brushed on greenware), with saturated-iron glaze and with accents of cobalt blue and copper red glazes. Legitimizing the Ashtray There IS a certain kind of freedom in purposely making an ashtray because the form has very few historical limitations. The idea of the ashtray being an “out cast” intrigued me. I wanted to take this inherently “low taste” image and elevate it to a level of sophistication. I hoped that this would come about by manip ulating color and form independently from function and the commonly held perception of the ashtray. Actually, ashtrays were the first ce ramic vessels I (like many people) made— they constitute an early memory of working in clay. But the image of “ashtrayness” is tainted by our precepts of what is “legitimate” or “proper” art. My influences are from specific pe riods in art and craft history which I am inspired by and want to elaborate on. In my work there are references to futur ist, Russian constructivist and Chinese ceramics. I especially respond to the way Giacomo Balia and Kasimir Malevich were able to imply motion in their com positions. There are also some refer ences to surface qualities I admire on early 15th-century Ming monochrome porcelain, as well as colors and designs from the 1940s and ’50s. I’ve always been interested in striking a balance between both formal issues and personal metaphors. When I started handbuilding ashtrays four years ago, I explored several shapes. Originally these structures were massive, then they evolved into crisper statements about form. Some are functional; others function simply as metaphor. The relationship of scale to the hand “ Vertical Black and Green ” handbuilt whiteware ashtray, 7 inches in height, by Ron Klein. 46 CERAMICS MONTHLY by Ron Klein is very important; building an ashtray of intimate scale seemed to make sense. Clay has historically predisposed itself to small containers or receptacles, and by building these objects at this scale I’ve found they retain an intrapersonal qual ity. The idea of an ashtray is in a sense a statement on and about our society. The artist, as an instrument of society, constantly reacts to the world. By seeing and “re-presenting” images in new ways we are sometimes tricked into revealing our prejudices and hopefully into edu cating ourselves in the art of eliminating them. The author Ron Klein teaches at Temple University's Tyler School of Art in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania. Above *Pool Tray” porcelain, 5 inches in length, handbuilt, with multifired commercial glazes. Ashtray shapes in this article are each cut from a single block of clay with wire or a hacksaw blade. Varying the number of wires twisted together, or the number of strands in each wire, creates diverse surface effects. Below “Motion Multiple " 9 inches in length, wirecut whiteware ashtray. Much of the artist's inspiration comes from the futurists and their ability to take a static object and make it appear in motion. “I wanted to pack a lot of movement in a little space. That’s why many of the works are so directional.” March 1984 47 “Jaw 7ray,” 4 inches in length, wire-cut porcelain ashtray. The jawlike aggressiveness of some of the anvil shapes relates to the artist’s interest in constructivism and suprematism. “I like the way Kasimir Malevich (a Russian painter) used simple shapes in a graphic way: color contrast enabled those shapes to move through space undisturbed. That’s really important to me.” ‘'Jade Anvil,” handbuilt, wire-cut porcelain ashtray, 7 inches in length, with multijired commercial glazes. ((Like many artists, Tm interested in surface qualities and attaining a certain lusciousness of glaze. Additionally, through an admiration for later Ming dynasty porcelain, I wanted to make some precious-looking objects that tied into that history of celadon ” “Black and Green Anvil,” 3V2 inches in length, handbuilt, wire-cut porcelain ashtray, with multijired commercial glazes, by Ron Klein. 48 Ceramics Monthly British Salt Glaze Although a popular form of pottery in England during the early 18th cen tury, salt-glazed stoneware gradually was superseded by more refined white earth enware. By the 19th century its use was restricted almost exclusively to drainage pipes, tiles and brick. Now large-scale commercial production has virtually ceased. But in the last decade salt glaze has become increasingly used by studio potters. As Peter Starkey commented, “Today what is good ‘salting’ is a very open question . . . and requires potters . . . to set the standards.” To show the results with modern salt glaze applica tions, the Crafts Study Centre in Bath, England, recently mounted an exhibi tion of work by 12 British potters. The majority of the pots, presented in this first selling exhibition of pottery at the Crafts Study Centre, were made to be used. The exhibition coincided with the Bath Festival, which is a peak time for visitors to the museum, but this sales advantage was offset by the possibility by Barley Roscoe Covered jar with wire handle, approximately 13 inches in height, by Ian Gregory. that the public would simply assume purchases impossible. Another potential detraction was that purchases could not be taken from the exhibition until the end of the showing. To overcome this, a stock area was established at one end of the exhibition; all contributors were asked to supply pots that could be sold there Thrown pitchers, each 7 inches in height, with incising, impressing, slip decoration, by Jane Hamlyn directly, in addition to the dozen they put in the exhibition itself. By the end of the show, however, nearly two-thirds of all works (approximately $2500 worth) had been sold. Prices ranged from about S3 for a small Micky Doh erty bottle to just over $200 for a large beer jar by Richard Batterham. Not sur prisingly, perhaps, more pots were sold at the lower end of the price range, and the more traditional forms proved par ticularly popular. Micky Doherty made the largest number of sales, while Svend Bayer was the only one to sell all his pots from the exhibition. Few of either of their pots cost more than $30. Al though Richard Batterham and Mick Casson included large forms in the show and their prices were at the higher end of the range, they were among the most successful regarding sales. It was Walter Keeler, however, who led the way in this respect with his sharply defined, consid ered functional pots. Interestingly, many of his sales were to craftspeople. i I I•s i i Above Stoneware pitcher, approximately 12 inches in height, wheel thrown, incised, with finger wiping through slip, by Michael Casson. Left Teapot, approximately 6 inches in height, thrown stoneware, faceted, by Richard Batterham. French Clay Expression Mixed-media sculpture, 10 feet in length, unfired clay with glass and cord, by Daniel Pontoreau. “EXPRESSION Terre,” a provocative exhibition of work by 12 French ceram ists, was shown in conjunction with the 41st international ceramics competition in Faenza, Italy (see “Faenza 1983” in the December issue). When invited by the Faenza exhibition organizing com mittee to present daywork from France, the French Ministry of Culture called for “contemporary plastic expression with clay.” A 15-member international jury selected ceramic objects and related pho tography, in order to demonstrate that the plastic arts all have the same impli cations in their processes. Gerard Rig- Environmental installation consisting of 6600 pounds of dry clay in three different colors, by Marie Pierre Roubin. nault (president of the “sans titre” design association and the exhibition’s organ izer) considered this presentation a con frontation of artistic disciplines in the cultural space of everyday life. “Profes sionals in the plastic arts have overall responsibility for giving form to our en vironment,” he commented. European potters often mention French ceramists as feeling a certain historically based supremacy and desire for lead ership in world ceramics, expressed in the case of this exhibition through mon umental works constructed with what ever unusual form ceramics might take: from clay powder to mixed media. While there are various philosophies of claywork in France (as anywhere), the over all theme of contemporary French ce ramics is uniquely polarized. In one camp are those who believe that only wood fire, porcelain, celadons and copper reds are reasonable ceramic pursuits; in the other are those (presented in this show) who feel the need to shun such traditions of process and, instead, build on a more dominant theme of French art through out the decades: making pure innovation the core of current work, regardless of process. “Hourglass,” a process work, by Jean-Luc Parent. The artist formed clay spheres daily, adding them to the installation throughout the exhibition. March 1984 51 Soup Tureens The currently touring exhibition “Soup Soup Beautiful Soup” premiered last fall at the Campbell Museum in Camden, New Jersey. Curated by Hel en Williams Drutt (of Helen Drutt Gal lery in Philadelphia), the partly invi tational, partly juried show offers varied approaches to tureen making. Its invited section features 35 exam ples from ten states and Canada, while the jurors (Metropolitan Museum of Art curator emeritus Carl Christian Dauterman, Alfred ceramist Wayne Higby and artist/art historian Burton Wasserman) accepted 29 entries from 14 states and Canada. Design is an important as pect of many of these tureens, though 52 CERAMICS MONTHLY a review by Victoria Donohoe for others, symbolism is almost equally important. What pop-related art is seen, and there is less of it than in the first Campbell’s tureen exhibition seven years ago, has standing behind it a strong element of surrealism. Such forms have the incon gruity of a surrealist object, together with the reality of pop. Moreover, reflected here too is the fact that we have been seeing inventive new kinds of styles for some time now, and subsequently all sorts of efforts ride those styles toward neosurrealism. Occasional other works reflect a so ciety of consumer-oriented affluence. In some there is the avoidance of any tra dition or artistic fashion which is a form of fashion in itself, and there are those which exalt traditional tureen forms. Additionally this show focuses atten tion on the rapprochement between de signers and industry that occurred spon taneously at other periods of American ceramic history, and could occur again. Left to their own devices, the East Coast department stores and specialty shops generally stock up on imported repro ductions of old tureen designs, expensive and otherwise, while some others only take customers’ special orders from Eu ropean manufacturers who show tur eens to match specific china patterns. (Nowadays there is reduced demand for tureens of the latter type because the current trend favors mixing of dinnerware patterns, not matching services.) Repeatedly the biggest seller from the half-dozen soup tureens that John Wanamaker’s Philadelphia department store lists in its Christmas catalog year after year are a Portuguese green cabbage with ladle and stand ($39.99), and a footed all-white Portuguese tureen with ladle and stand (same price) that is slightly reminiscent of old Nymphenburg tur eens. On a more elaborate note, the highlight of Tiffany’s 1983 Christmas catalog was a very romantic, floral-dec orated copy of a Nymphenburg tureen made abroad. Priced at $6000, it was snapped up immediately but remained on conspicuous view as a focal point of the store’s Fifth Avenue pre-Christmas display. In a ceramics exhibit like this, there is implied a strong hope that the long standing rift between designers and in dustry could begin to be healed. Tureen design has always followed the trend of architecture, albeit at some remove. This accounts for the subsiding of both the pop-flavored ideas and the remnants of the severe international style of the mid 20th century. What we see gradually taking their place are tureens that (as painting, sculpture and architecture also do today) increasingly incorporate his torical elements into designs that share the same concerns about space and structure that would have concerned modern earlier work. Artists no longer hesitate to return to classical language that provides an alternative to the dis ordered mix of styles rampant today. And some ceramists do seem more interested here in playing with geometric forms than in creating usable tureens. But that trend is fading. The most interesting tureens in this exhibition are the ones in which history (including tureen history) is not spurned altogether. The author Victoria Donohoe is art critic for the Philadelphia Inquirer. Far left “Pig Tureen ,* 20V2 inches in height, handbuilt porcelain, with glazes and lusters, by Lizbeth Stewart, Philadelphia. Top left Handbuilt tureen with ladle, 12 inches in length, glazed porcelain, by Joseph Detwiler, Fredericksburg, Virginia. Top center “Bird Nest Soup” tureen, porcelain, with cast additions, 10 inches in diameter, by Andrea S. Joseph, Portland, Oregon. Top right Earthenware tureen, 10 inches in length, majolica glaze, by Ian Symons, Alfred, New York. Photos: courtesy of the Campbell Museum Left “Casa de Soupa de Tabasco,* handbuilt earthenware, 14 inches in height, with underglaze, glaze and slip decoration, by Jens Morrison, Carlsbad, California. March 1984 53 <(Campbell Tureen,” handbuilt, 24 inches in length, by Anne Currier, Louisville, Colorado. Wheel-thrown stoneware tureen, 10 inches in diameter, polychrome brush decoration over glaze, reduction fired, by John Glick, Farmington, Michigan. Stoneware tureen, 10 inches in height, wheel thrown, reduction fired, by Bruce Cochrane, Mississauga, Ontario. “Iceberg Lake,” 13V2 inches in height, raku-fired earthenware, by Wayne Higby, Alfred, New York. 54 Ceramics Monthly Far left "Shark Fin Soup Tureen ” 16V2 inches in height, salt-glazed stoneware, with slips, blue wood ash glaze, by Robert Winokur, Horsham, Pennsylvania. Left “Stone Soup,” 18 inches in length, cast and handbuilt porcelain and earthenware, by Richard L. MacKenzieChilds, King Ferry, New York. Below Wheel-thrown porcelain tureen, 14 inches in height, with slip decoration, salt glazed, by Norm Schulman, Columbus. March 1984 55 “Soup aux Pois” (Pea Soup), 11 inches in diameter, earthenware and stainless steel, by Alain Bonneau and Denise Goyer, Montreal. “Chicken in Box,” 12 inches in height, handbuilt stoneware, by N. Craig Hinshaw, Davison, Michigan. “The American Dream Supreme Tureen,” 30 inches in length (the tureen is in the goose), by Nancy E. Lenches, Tucson. 56 Ceramics Monthly (<Soup Stress,” handbuilt porcelain, 14 inches in length, with glaze, lusters, by Tom Rippon, Smithville, Tennessee. Right “ The End of St. Stephan” (the tureen is inside the targe “rock”), cast and assembled earthenware, 24 inches in height, by Mark Burns, Philadelphia. Far right “Cheshire,” handbuilt, low-jire clay tureen, 13V2 inches in height, with glazes, china paint, by Nancy Carman, San Francisco. Below “Family Style—Toucans of Campbell Soup,” 13V2 inches in height, thrown and handbuilt earthenware with underglazes, by Ronald Mazanowski, DeKalb, Illinois. March 1984 57 “Animal Tureenhandbuilt earthenware, 20 inches in length, by Andrea Gill, Kent. “Campbell’s Soup Box,” 17 inches in length, cast and assembled, with glazes, by Victor Spinski, Newark, Delaware. Raku tureen with earthenware lid, 15 inches in diameter, thrown, altered, with handbuilt additions, by Syd Carpenter, Philadelphia. 58 CERAMICS MONTHLY Right "Lock Lid Tureen,” thrown and handbuilt clay, 12 inches in width, with wood, glaze, paint, by Dan Johnson, Philadelphia. Far right "Blue Skyline Tureen,” 13 inches in diameter, salt-glazed stone ware, thrown, with incising through slip, by Kirk Mangus, Mercer, Pennsylvania. Below "The Celebration of the Birth of Mother Nature,” 15 inches in diameter, with underglazes, glaze, lusters and gold, by Stefania Lestier, Philadelphia. March 1984 59 Hobart Cowles White Glazes The following white and off-white glazes were developed by Hobart Cowles (1923-1980) during his 29-year teach ing career at the Rochester Institute of Technology. With the exception of the Cone 06 Crazed Majolica-type glaze, all were tested at Cone 5 on a buff clay body. Results will vary on different bod ies, in different kilns, with different fir ing cycles. None were tested with ad ditional colorants. (Even those containing rutile remain colorless.) The full range, therefore, could be tested with and with out colorants at Cones 4, 5 and 6 to determine compatibility with studio clays and firing processes. Stony Gray-White Glaze (Cone 5) Colemanite......................................... 21.3% Custer Feldspar ................................ 14.5 Frit 3134 (Ferro)............................... 14.9 Spodumene......................................... 11.0 Kaolin................................................. 17.0 Flint .................................................... 21.3 100.0% Add: Tin Oxide.................................. 5.1% Stony White Glaze (Cone 5) Barium Carbonate............................ 14.2% Dolomite............................................. 14.3 Talc...................................................... 14.3 Cornwall Stone.................................. 14.3 Spodumene......................................... 14.3 Kaolin................................................. 14.3 Flint .................................................... 14.3 100.0% Semitransparent White Glaze 1 (Cone 5) Barium Carbonate............................ 19.1% Colemanite......................................... 14.1 Frit P626 (Pemco)............................. 28.7 Petalite....................... ....................... 19.1 Kaolin................................................. 9.5 Flint .................................................... 9.5 100.0% Add: Opax.......................................... 5.0% 60 CERAMICS MONTHLY by Lili Krakowski Semitransparent White Glaze 2 Cold Snow White Glaze (Cone 5) Barium Carbonate............................ 25.0% Colemanite......................................... 12.5 Petalite ............................................... 37.5 Kaolin................................................. 12.5 Flint .................................................... 12.5 (Cone 5) Dolomite............................................. 12.6% Frit 3124 (Ferro)............................... 18.7 Petalite ............................................... 50.0 Kaolin................................................. 12.5 Flint .................................................... 6.2 Add: Tin Oxide.................................. 3.0% Add: Zinc Oxide ............................... 12.5% 100.0% Semitransparent White Glaze 3 (Cone 5) Barium Carbonate............................ 14.2% Colemanite......................................... 14.3 Talc..................................................... 14.3 Cornwall Stone.................................. 14.3 Spodumene......................................... 14.3 Kaolin................................................. 14.3 Flint .................................................... 14.3 100.0% Add: Zinc Oxide ............................... 14.3% Rutile....................................... 3.4% Vanilla Ice Cream Glaze (Cone 5) Dolomite............................................. 17.0% Kingman Feldspar............................ 34.1 Frit 3134 (Ferro)......................... 14.9 Kaolin................................................. 17.0 Flint .................................................... 17.0 100.0% Add: Granular Rutile....................... 1.7% Transparent White Glaze (Cone 5) Barium Carbonate............................ 23.0% Dolomite............................................. 10.6 Petalite ............................................... 37.2 Kaolin................................................. 11.5 Flint .................................................... 17.7 100.0% Crazed Majolica-type Glaze (Cone 06) Frit 3124 (Ferro)............................... 89.1% Kaolin................................................. 10.9 100.0% Add: Opax.......................................... 8.7% 100.0% Snow White Satin Glaze (Cone 5) Barium Carbonate............................ 23.5% Colemanite......................................... 17.6 Petalite ............................................... 35.3 Kaolin................................................. 11.8 Flint .................................................... 11.8 100.0% Add: Tin Oxide.................................. 4.2% White Frosting Glaze (Cone 5) Whiting............................................... 25.2% Custer Feldspar ................................ 26.7 Flint .................................................... 48.1 100.0% Add: Magnesium Zirconium Silicate..................................... 8.0% Zirconium Spinel .................. 8.0% Mope White Glaze 1 (Cone 5) Lithium Carbonate........................... 4.7% Frit 3134 (Ferro)............................... 52.4 Kaolin................................................. 38.1 Flint .................................................... 4.8 100.0% Add: Tin Oxide.................................. 7.6% Mope White Glaze 2 (Cone 5) Frit 3134 (Ferro)............................... 52.4% Kaolin................................................. 38.1 Flint .................................................... 9.5 100.0% Add: Tin Oxide.................................. 7.6% Colemanite White Glaze (Cone 5) Colemanite............................................ 31% Dolomite ............................................... 14 Kaolin ................................................... 19 Flint........................................................ 36 100% Gray-White Glaze (Cone 5) Dolomite............................................. 15.4% Frit 3124 (Ferro)............................... 23.1 Petalite .............................................. 61.5 100.0% Add: Zinc Oxide .............................. 15.4% Creamy White Glaze (Cone 5) Dolomite............................................... 19.2% Frit P626 (Pemco)............................. 30.8 Petalite .............................................. 19.2 Kaolin................................................. 30.8 100.0% Add: Tin Oxide..................................................3.8% Milk White Glaze (Cone 5) Dolomite............................................... 17.2% Custer Feldspar ............................... 20.7 Kaolin................................................. 41.4 Flint ................................................... 20.7 100.0% Add: Tin Oxide..................................................6.9% Semimatt White Glaze (Cone 5) Barium Carbonate............................... 16.6% Dolomite.................................................... 16.6 Talc............................................................ 16.7 Spodumene............................................... 16.7 Kaolin........................................................ 16.7 Flint .......................................................... 16.7 100.0% Add: Zinc Oxide ................................. 16.7% Rutile......................................... 16.7% The author Lili Krakow ski is a studio ceramist in Constableville, New York. March 1984 61 64 CERAMICS MONTHLY News & Retrospect Penn Station Renovation When Pennsylvania Station in Baltimore was designed in 1910, New York architect Kenneth Murchison specified the installation of Rookwood cream and green tile through out. But the years following construction were not kind: coal soot dirtied the tilework, holes were regularly drilled through it to install electric outlets for vending machines and il luminated advertising signs, and even a Rookwood water fountain was altered for the installation of a metal water cooler. Ten years ago the city recognized the im portance of what had once been a high-style public building and planned its restoration. Blue Ridge, Virginia, potter Bob van Kluyve was hired to renovate the Rookwood wall tile, sidelights and the cherubic water foun- boards of United Way, the Advertising Coun cil, Stoner Broadcasting and the University of Nebraska Foundation. In keeping with ACC plans to accelerate national programs, future board meetings will be held in various parts of the country (out side New York City); the board will meet this spring in Lexington, Kentucky, in con junction with the ACC Southeast Regional Assembly. Incorporating elements of pottery and fur niture, mixed-media works by Ron Dale, Oxford, Mississippi, were featured in a solo exhibition at the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, through December 30,1983. Char- Bob van Kluyve restoring Rookwood at Penn Station New ACC Chairman The American Crafts Council recently an nounced that Charles D. Peebler; Jr., was elected chairman of the board, succeeding cochairmen Robert O. Peterson and Sidney Rosoff. Peebler is president and chief executive officer of Bozell & Jacobs, an advertising and public relations firm, and also serves on the It seems natural to spot the piece of sky, while going through customs, as if it were a window view. But “Sky with Cumulus” in Fairbanks International Airport is a trompe l’oeil ceramic relief mural spanning 17 feet. Ron Dale 38-inch-high mixed-media “Couple” tain. As Jacques Kelly noted in the Baltimore News‘American, “It has been slow work. He had to do considerable analysis of the old tile’s composition, then figure a way to make them graffiti proof.” Whenever possible, badly damaged tile were replaced with tile blocks from walls altered during renovation, but Bob also found a New Jersey pottery willing to make a batch of substitutes. Meanwhile he continued his own studio production, and a dual exhibition with Bob’s functional ware, umbrella stands and foun tains was presented at Craftsmanship gallery in Baltimore through November 20, 1983. Photo: Fred G. Kraft, Jr. Polly Lee 17-foot-long “Sky with Cumulus' Commissioned under the Alaska One Per cent for Art Program, it was the first of four wall works made for state-funded buildings by Polly Lee, Petersburg, Alaska. High-fired glazed tiles, 8 inches in width and (random ly) from 4 to 10 inches in length, were fas tened to stained fir planks, mounted verti cally to form a sliced ellipse on the wall. “I like planning specific things for specific places,” Polly commented. “It’s a designer’s instinct, I suppose. I look at the blueprint of the space, think about who’s using the place and what their frame of mind will be.” Polly believes artists should also be in volved in selecting the site for their work. “Upon arriving to install the work an artist may find a large electric clock on the wall, or a secretary’s files intruding on that space.” The cloud scene in the airport was installed only inches above a row of chairs and below a soffit extending from the ceiling. Living in a small island town of 3000, isolated even from neighboring towns, has given Polly a perspective that “every person involved in art must respond to the natural surroundings and must respond in a positive way. “Everything in art,” she continued, “stems from nature even if it is very abstract. You take an element, a visual impression, out of its natural context and develop that move ment into a theme of your own.” Text: Mar garet D. Smith; photo: Barry Me Wayne. Ceramic Arsenal Replica Four tons of miniature clay warheads, missiles, bombers and submarines repre acteristic of the forms shown, “Couple” and senting nuclear weapons now in the United “Washstand” were made with low-fire clay, States arsenal were displayed recently at 373 wood and paint. Broadway in New York City. Denver cera mist Barbara Donachy “came up with the idea about two years ago and began by doing You are invited to send news and photo and making wheel-thrown models. graphs about people, places or events of research If people read that the United States has over interest. We will be pleased to consider 35,000 nuclear weapons, they understand that them for publication in this column. Mail this is an enormous number; however, when submissions to: News and Retrospect, they see the display, I hope it will have a Ceramics Monthly, Box 12448, Colum clarity that statistics could never achieve.” bus, Ohio 43212. Continued Ron Dale's “Washstand,” 62 inches in height March 1984 65 66 Ceramics Monthly News & Retrospect Working with molds and 200-pound batches of casting slip, Barbara and her husband Andy Bardwell with a variety of helpers were able to produce replicas of up to 600 warheads, about 30 missiles, several planes and one or two 3-foot-long submarines per day. The dry in these 30,000 warheads, from buff to or ange to black, inspired the project title “Am ber Waves of Grain.” Barbara and Andy have been selling their work “on a scale of about $1 per SI million of the actual weapon’s cost”: warheads are $4, Poseidon missiles, SI5, Trident subma rines, S2400. Every warhead is numbered, and each one sold is replaced with an un numbered piece to preserve the arsenal for display. “Although this image represents an “Amber Waves of Grain ” awesome destructive potential,” Barbara commented, “it is extremely unpolitical in that it presents a fact not a viewpoint.” Barbara Donachy works on a Minuteman II replica clay warheads were stacked four high, 200 in a 10x 10-inch box; in turn the boxes were filled with sawdust (and some dogfood) then loaded in a 100-cubic-foot gas kiln. “We built a saggar wall out of hard and insulating brick that completely enclosed the pieces,” Barbara explained, “and fired to what we approxi mate was Cone 1 or 2 in pretty heavy re duction. The large amount of carbon made Fiber Insulating a Salt Kiln Because earlier attempts to save fuel through insulating existing kilns had proven success ful, I wanted to try to duplicate the results in an existing salt-glaze kiln. Skidmore Col lege’s kiln was not fuel efficient because of the density of the walls: 1 inch of high-alumina castable refractory (94.8% alumina) plus 3½ inches of dense castable and 4½ inches of 2300°F firebrick. First, to determine if fiber insulation could withstand the deteriorating effects of sodium vapors, only part of the kiln’s back wall was replaced with Babcock & Wilcox Kaowool 3000 (Saffil) 2-inch-thick fiber veneering modules; the fiber is composed of 95% alu mina and 5% silica. After six salt firings, the Module removed for inspection after six firings 30,000 warheads were reduction fired to Cone 1 or 2 the cones bubble so we were never quite sure what the temperature was. We fired about 7000 pieces in each firing.” Color variations fiber modules remained intact. There was, however, a little shrinkage around the edges of the section, which was easily corrected by filling the cracks with extra Saffil fiber. The bond of the high-temperature mortar was also checked to see if the salt vapors had reached it, but neither the wall section nor the mortar showed signs of attack. A Zircar Sali Board, and a Babcock & Wilcox ceramic pin and locking washer were also tested in Continued March 1984 67 68 Ceramics Monthly News & Retrospect Salt is packed in paper cups and dropped into the firebox from above the burners rath er than being sprayed into the kiln. (Spraying salt directly onto the fiber may cause its de terioration.) Approximately 12 pounds of salt are used per firing—the same amount as be fore installing the new lining. Since this is a new application for the Bonded 30, it has not yet passed the impor tant test of time. However, the Kaowool 3000 these firings; they, too, resisted the strong ac tion of the salt vapors. Based on the success of this test, I planned to line the entire salt kiln with Saffil veneering modules, installed with the Babcock & Wilcox pins and wash ers, and to utilize the Sali Board as a damper. Then the Carborundum Company began to manufacture their own polycrystalline bonded fiber veneering modules. The Bonded 30 module is a blend of high-purity bulk fiber with polycrystalline mullite (Fibermax): 72% alumina and 28% silica. Mullite is chemically very stable and thus well suited for this application. To test the Bonded 30 to see if it would hold up too, modules were mortared on the roof and side wall; again the salt vapors did not penetrate behind the mod ules. After seven firings, only a slight bit of shrinkage occurred, and these modules also proved resistant to salt vapors. As a result of these tests, I recommend insulating a salt kiln with either of the fol lowing ceramic fiber module systems: Bab cock & Wilcox Kaowool 3000 (Saffil) mod ules, 6 pound per cubic foot density, 2 inches thick, installed with Unistik A mortar on dense castable or hardbrick, Unistik C on insulat ing brick or castable; or Carborundum Bond ed 30 modules, 7 pound density, 2 inches thick, installed with Fiberstick veneering mortar. Any exposed mortar should be coated with a salt-resistant wash of 85% alumina hydrate and 15% any white-burning ball clay. The entire Skidmore kiln was lined with Interior after five salt firings Carborundum Bonded 30 modules (see “In (Saffil) modules have been in place for over sulating Existing Kilns” in the September a year and a half (60 or more firings) with good results. 1983 CM for installation tips). Except for a Cost Analysis Skidmore College’s car kiln has 27 cubic feet of stacking space. The cost for installing 2 inches of Carborundum Bonded 30 insu lation was: 50 modules at $27.95 each...................$1397.50 150 pounds Fiberstick.......................... 45.00 Total......................................................$1442.50 (The cost for Saffil modules and Unistik would be exactly the same.) Firing the salt kiln to Cone 9-10 before the lining was installed cost approximately $43 (8200 cubic feet of natural gas); after ward, the cost was reduced to $25.80 (4920 cubic feet of gas)—a 40% reduction. Esti mating 40 firings per year, the pay-back pe riod is a little over two years: cost of lining ($1442.50) divided by the savings (40 X $17.20 = $688). Veneered kiln interior after 800°F prefiring few small cracks between modules, the fiber veneer has held up beautifully and firing time has been reduced by seven hours on the av erage. If the kiln was fired with propane, the pay back period would be less than a year. Before the lining was installed, firing to Cone 9-10 with propane cost $91.82 ($1 per gallon). A 40% savings ($36.73) multiplied by 40 firings would be $1469.20. The Zircar Sali Board, because it also suc cessfully resisted corrosive high temperature Continued March 1984 69 70 CERAMICS MONTHLY News & Retrospect salt vapors, is being used for the salt kiln damper. Over the previous four years, the kiln had had three 12x24-inch stainless steel dampers and two silicon carbide shelf dam pers. A 12x24xV2-inch Zircar Sali Board cost $231, but it should be well worth the investment. The salt kiln, because it is generally con structed of a dense refractory, offers the high est potential for fuel reduction as a result of insulating. I have not yet lined a used hardbrick salt kiln, but I believe that if a disk sander (equipped with 24-grit tungsten-carbide disks) is used to remove the old kiln wash from the surface, the module veneering should insulate equally well. The 2-inch thickness of the fiber should protect the bond of the mortar to the wall from deterioration and revaporization at the interface. Text: Re gis C. Brodie. at Meredith Contemporary Art in Baltimore recently. The extruded and altered white earthenware forms were often combined with copper tubing elements, as in “Take Two,” 37 inches in height, bisqued at Cone 02, Spanish Competition The 12th “National Ceramic Competi tion” exhibition was presented at the Mu nicipal Museum of Manises in Valencia, Spain, through November 20, 1983. From a field of 177 works by 97 applicants, 96 func tional and sculptural objects were selected by a six-member jury: ceramists Carmen Ballester (winner of the 11th competition), Carlos Carle, Elena Colmeiro and Angel Garraza; art critic Roman de la Calle; and chemist Jose Luis Lahuerta. First place was awarded jointly 37-inch “Take Two* brushed with commercial underglazes and studio-mixed textured glazes, Cone 04 fired. “This is the first time in about ten years that I have worked with plastic clay,” the artist commented, “and it’s a nice change from slip casting all the time—much freer, more ex pressive. “I consider myself to be a builder. As such, I work in a primary manner with concepts, materials and activities to produce specific Robert Milnes effects. The objects I build are both inter pretations of and additions to the world. As interpretations, they reflect my thought and work processes. As objects, they are not about anything, but are raw data to be interpreted.” Photos: M. Holt and courtesy of Edinboro University of Pennsylvania. 18-inch-high "Uovo“ by Cecilia Lopez Dominguez Visiting Yu Fujiwara Color these pots bronze and deep chocolate to Cecilia Lopez Dominguez and Magda brown, mixed with steel gray and blue or Marti Coll, entitling them both to solo ex streaked with red. The surfaces can be dull hibitions with the presentation of the 13th or shiny, and are frequently rough, demand annual competition. ing extra attention for this wood-fired ware produced in western fapan during the past Robert Milnes 1000 years. Brightly glazed, low-fired, mixed-media Today there are approximately 40 potters sculpture by ceramist Robert Milnes (Cam working in Bizen (Imbe), including Yu Fubridge Springs, Pennsylvania) was exhibited Continued March 1984 71 72 Ceramics Monthly News & Retrospect jiwara. His studio is on the side of a steep hill overlooking the Inland Sea. The grounds are kept immaculate and the pines pruned by elderly gardeners wearing large, conical hats. Stockpiled behind the studio are tall piles of the red pine used to fire the multichambered climbing kiln, sheltered in a room by itself. Born in 1932, Fujiwara is a stocky, intense man whose philosophy of art springs from his Zen Buddhist outlook on life. He recently received ten American journalists in his stu dio and as is done in this part of Japan, served them a frothy, bitter, chartreuse-col- touch.” Formed on the wheel, it emerges as sake bottles, cups, vases, bowls and dishes. As important as the actual shaping of the pot is its placement in the large climbing kiln or noborigama. Loading proceeds over sev eral days, with the flow of heat during firing in mind. Small cups may be placed over larg er pots to impart a round design where the larger form is not exposed to ash and flame. A speckled goma pattern is the result of ash deposits. To produce reddish streaks, rice straw is bound around the pot—a technique called hidasuki. The firing of Fujiwara’s kiln is tied to the Buddhist calendar, with the kindling ignited on Tai-an day, traditionally a lucky day. The kiln is warmed for a few days, then fired for about nine days with 3000 red pine logs. Temperature is maintained at 2400°F, after which the kiln is left to cool for more than a week. The allure of the wood-fired ware was perhaps best explained by Yu Fujiwara’s father: “The beauty of true Bizen ware lies in its boldness and simplicity. It is direct and natural. It is strong, plain and honest. It does not pretend.” Text: Martin Rosenberg. Allester Dillon Yu Fujiwara Woven stoneware vessels by Allester Dil lon, Mill Valley, California, were presented at Evergreen Contemporary Craft Gallery in Guilford, Connecticut, through March 4. ored tea with sweet, thin wafers and fruit as he explained what distinguishes the pottery of Bizen. First there is the black clay, relatively low in iron content but rich with organic im purities. “Bizen clay has great viscosity and intense elasticity,” Fujiwara says in the book, Living Treasures in Japan. “It is responsive to the potter’s fingers, but retains the form he gives it. It is absolutely superb clay.” Originally it was dug from the mountain side, but around 400 years ago the Bizen potters started using field clay. Now the clay is excavated from 10 feet below local rice paddies in the winter. Apprentices then work the clay to re move pebbles and other impurities, and leave it to age for years. Students must spend much time pre paring clay before they are allowed to throw Bizen ware, Fujiwara explained. If their fin 10-inch-high unglazed zuoven coil vase gers have not developed an intimacy with the Forms, such as this flattened spheroid rubbed material, their efforts will be wasted and the with black stain, were assembled from sec world would be polluted with flawed pots. tions made by weaving coils in a mold. Westerners frequently rebel against Fujiwara’s discipline, unwilling to invest the years John Lely he considers preparatory to mastering Bizen Sculpture by Dutch ceramist John Lely artistry. was featured recently at Galerie De Sluis in Fujiwara’s late father once described the Leidschendam, The Netherlands. Characclay of the area as “creamy and silky to the Continued March 1984 73 74 Ceramics Monthly News & Retrospect teristic of his “Erotische Droom: Bloemen na de Bom,” this stoneware slab form, approx- Slab sculpture with brushed turquoise glaze imately 12 inches in height, was fired at 2300°F (1260°C). Jim Shrosbree Low-fire sculptural vessels by Jim Shros bree, faculty artist at Maharishi Interna tional University in Fairfield, Iowa, were ex hibited recently at Great American Gallery in Atlanta. “The forms are resolutions of op posite relationships, opposite values in une qual proportions: edge/volume, volume/flat- “Triangle Blanket Vessel,” 9½ inches in height ness, thick/thin, opposing colors, etc.,” Jim explained. “I usually work in series, some times on several objects at once. As forms evolve, I enjoy finding new ways to build the “Striped Blanket Vessel ” 12 inches in height same form, alternating between and combin ing slab construction (soft and leather hard), Continued March 1984 75 76 Ceramics Monthly News & Retrospect coil, assembled thrown, and assembled ex truded elements. This continually allows me a new way to see familiar situations—keep ing the clay ahead of me and the forms fresh and lively—while pursuing equilibrium in each vessel.” Slips or underglazes are applied on damp greenware made from the following clay body: Earthenware Body (Cone 04) Talc.......................................................... 12.5 lbs. Cedar Heights Redart Clay...................150.0 Hawthorne Bonding Clay..................... 50.0 H. C. Spinks Ball Clay......................... 25.0 Sand................................................................ 12.5 250.0 lbs. After bisquing at Cone 04, “the pots undergo successive firings at Cones 08 and 06 with further thick and thin coats of slips and un derglazes plus glaze sandwiched in between to build surface texture and translucency,” Jim explained. Dry White Slip (Cone 08-07) Gerstley Borate.......................................... 14.3% Kaolin........................................................ 57.1 Flint............................................................ 28.6 100.0% Soldner Clear Glaze (Cone 07) Gerstley Borate............................................. 80% Kentucky Ball Clay (OM 4)......................... 20 100% “Art is the expression of life,” he com mented. “What I am expressing are distil lations of feelings which, in essence, have to do with happiness, joy, ideal places—uto pia.” Photos: Richard Weber. James C. Watkins Stoneware platters, vases and covered jars with multifired surface treatment inspired by the American Southwest were recently ex hibited by James C. Watkins, Lubbock, Tex as, at the Amarillo Art Center. Among the Platter from “Painted Desert Series” 42 works presented in this one-man show were two 19-inch platters, thrown, multifired Continued March 1984 77 78 Ceramics Monthly News & Retrospect at Cone 11, from the “Painted Desert Series.” “The more I work,” James commented, “the simpler my approach is becoming. I now only James C. Watkins's 19-inch platter use three glazes, but vary their effects by lacing slips with aggregates such as small bits of rust and crushed bisqued clays.” Photos: Priscilla Smith. Steve Dennis Covered jars, plates and cylindrical vessels by Steve Dennis (Priest Lake, Idaho) were recently shown at the Spotlight Gallery of Contemporary Crafts in Portland, Oregon. Saggar-fired covered vessel Thrown and altered from local terra cotta, the exhibited works such as this covered ves sel, above, 14 inches in height, were fired in saggars; salt and ash from debris packed around the forms resulted in surface color variation. Finland’s Pot Viapori Located in a former barracks on an 18thcentury fortification island half an hour from the Helsinki market shore, Pot Viapori is a Continued March 1984 79 80 Ceramics Monthly News & Retrospect collective studio run by five ceramists and a weaver. “The association was founded by stu dents from the University of Industrial Arts following the ideas of other collective studios in Scandinavia,” Asa Heilman recalled. “In 1970 the economic crisis at Arabia (the larg est ceramic factory in Finland) led to the closure of its art department. This was the beginning of the crafts revival here. Students didn’t seek positions in the ceramic industry anymore, but started their own workshops.” At first the space didn’t even have running water, but now the building is completely restored and everyone has a private studio. Pot Viapori is housed in former barracks Members have private work space, share equipment A $2000 entrance fee entitles each member to use the association’s equipment and facil ities; monthly rent is approximately $100, excluding electricity. Together the members order a ready-mixed German stoneware (fired to Cone 9 in oxidation), but each has indi vidual glazes. “As a group it is easier to get grants from government and private sources,” noted Asa. Asa Heilman decorating 24-inch bowl “Our last one was for repairing the kiln and buying a spray booth. “We are artists, not craftspeople,” she em phasized. “Mass production is against our Continued March 1984 81 82 Ceramics Monthly News & Retrospect ideology. The handcraft movement is fairly new in Finland, if compared with elsewhere Lustered, thrown stoneware “ Wolf Bowl” by Asa Heilman in Europe, and one-of-a-kind pottery is not valued here yet; also ceramic sculpture is to tally misunderstood. We have to compromise by teaching part time to make a living.” Pot Viapori had over 6000 visitors last summer, and the members also sell work through group exhibitions and at a cooper ative art shop in Helsinki. Text: Pirjo PolariKhan. An Adobe Kiln As part of a project I’m working on with Nader Khalili (see “Fired Houses” in the November 1983 CM) at the Ojai Foundation in Southern California, I recently built a pro pane-fueled crossdraft kiln from about 2500 handmade adobe bricks. The arch is cate- Adobe kiln with fiber refractory door nary, but constructed Middle-Eastern style with no support form. The back wall was built first, then a catenary curve drawn on it (from a pattern made with a suspended wet rope). The rest of it was freehand. Once I realized that this system is based on arcs that the human body describes rather than mathematical formulas, I just went at it in tuitively. The outside of the kiln was plastered (over chicken wire) with a clay/sand/cement mix ture, which cracked enough to release steam during firing. The door is two layers of 4pound Cerablanket backed by one layer of Fiberglas insulation on a welded angle-iron frame. One person can easily lift one of the Continued March 1984 83 News & Retrospect two sections, which simply lean against the arch opening. The four burner blowers are solar pow ered: photovoltaic panel to 12-volt battery to an inverter for 110 volts A.C. But the first firing was powered by a gasoline generator because of some difficulty with the inverter. The kiln also has a stoking port below the door so that it can be fired with wood as well. After a long candling (12 hours), the heat was turned up gradually until Cone 06 was reached (24 hours). When the kiln began to glow red inside, large clouds of steam rose from the surface. The bricks appear to have fired about half their thickness (8 inches) and would prob ably have done better with a slower firing. Harder brick would be more resistant to water erosion. Since our local clay contains so much lime, we are still experimenting with a formula to make a sound building brick; however, we’ll be using the same basic construction tech nique for a large dome next year. Text: Jim Danis ch. Nancy Mulick Columbus, Ohio, ceramist Nancy Mulick recently exhibited two figures from her “Planet Wanderer” series at the Sarah Doyle Gallery of Brown University in Providence, Rhode 22-inch-high stoneware “Planet Wanderer” Island. Handbuilt from stoneware, the forms were airbrushed with Mason stain/Gerstley borate glazes in a prismatic gradation from orange to turquoise. Cincinnati Cup Invitational Cup and saucer forms ranging from prim itive to whimsical contemporary were fea- 84 CERAMICS MONTHLY tured in a recent invitational at Vertu in Cin cinnati. John Stephenson, Ann Arbor, Michigan, extruded two basic shapes to make this set of coffee cups, stored on a wall-mounted oak 5-inch-high extruded cups by John Stephenson peg rack. A cylindrical extrusion was cut to the appropriate length, dipped in colored slip and attached to a bricklike extruded base. For an individual serving from steeped tea leaves, Mike Imes (New Haven, Kentucky) designed this cup, saucer and strainer set, 4½ Mike Imes’s “Tea for One” inches in height, with ash glaze over porce lain slip, fired to Cone 10. And Barbara Tip ton, Powell, Ohio, decorated this thrown por Slip-trailed cup and saucer by Barbara Tipton celain cup and saucer with slip-trailed faces on the cup to match slip-trailed male and female torsos on the saucer. Photos: Dan Bai ley, Ron Forth. Jan Eckardt Butler Porcelain platters and bowls with hand built animals on the rims and figurative sculpture by Tulsa ceramist Jan Eckardt Butler were exhibited at the Oklahoma Art Center in Oklahoma City through January 3. After bisquing, the forms frequently are Continued March 1984 85 86 CERAMICS MONTHLY News & Retrospect patterned with stain and glaze dots “to make the animals move in your eyes.” Because she ipe) and fired Martha Friend. t0 Cone 4 in oxidation. Photo: Vessel Sculpture “The Vessel as Sculpture,” featuring ce ramics by Rick Foris (Marathon City, Wis consin), Bruce Howdle (Mineral Point, Wis consin) and Kevin Osborn (Tucson), was exhibited at Mindscape Gallery in Evanston, 5-inch aDotted Goose Bowlthrown and handbuilt “could never say it in words,” Jan tells the viewer with clay “how I feel about the way cats move, and the way geese make a design in the air with their necks, the way dogs sniff and the way rabbits leap.” New Gallery / 7-inch-high raku vessel by Rick Foris Illinois, through January 27. Characteristic of Rick’s work with matt-surfaced raku is this thrown form, with handbuilt additions. After ten years at its Evanston, Illinois, Judy Kepes Employing a variety of traditional tech location, Mindscape Gallery has opened a second space in downtown Chicago. The new niques, but often realigning standard forms, gallery, the Mindscape Collection, will focus Bay Area clay artist Judy Kepes produces on sculptural work in various media, in vessel-oriented sculpture. An exhibition of cluding ceramics, fiber, glass and wood. Connecticut Annual Work by approximately 20 ceramists was featured in the national invitational and ju ried “Fifteenth Annual Celebration of Amer ican Crafts” shown at the Creative Arts Workshop in New Haven, Connecticut, through December 23, 1983. Among the Engobe-decorated covered jar by George Boutross 9-inch marbleware vase thrown functional ware presented by George Boutross, Somerville, Massachusetts, was this covered jar, 6 inches in height, brushed with bright engobes at the dry greenware stage (interiors glazed with a transparent gloss rec- her recent work, such as this marbleware vase, 9 inches in height, with black handles echoing its shape, was featured at the Quay Gallery in San Francisco recently. Photo: M. Lee Fatherree. March 1984 87 Itinerary Continued from Page 23 forming and decorating demonstration and slide lecture. Fee: $25. Contact: Tom Glover, Amarillo College, Art Department, Box 447, Amarillo 79178; or call: (806) 376-5111, ext. 2351. Vermont, Middlebury March 31-April 2 Cynthia Bringle, participatory workshop on form and decoration, and slide lecture. Fee: $100. Con tact: Melissa Pope, Frog Hollow Craft Center, Middlebury 05753; or call: (802) 388-3177. International Events Canada, Alberta, Edmonton through March 19 “From the Heart: Folk Art in Canada”; at Ed monton Art Gallery, 2 Sir Winston Churchill Sq. Canada, Manitoba, Winnipeg March 4-April 15 “Reflections on Three Plains: Contemporary Crafts” juried exhibition; at the Winnipeg Art Gallery, Civic Auditorium, 300 Memorial Blvd. England, London through March 18 “The Omega Workshops, 1913-19,” includes ceramics by Quentin Bell, Angelica Bell and Phyllis Keyes; at Crafts Council Galleries, 12 Waterloo Place. March 2-31 Gordon Baldwin, Mick Casson, Joanna Constantinidis, Ewen Henderson, Walter Keeler, Gillian Lowndes, Eileen Nisbet and Colin Pearson; at the British Crafts Centre, 43 Earlham Street, Covent Garden. France, Paris through March 13 Pit Nicolas, sculpture; at Interieurs, 16, rue Dauphine. Japan, Nagoya March 23-28 Rob Barnard, 120 wood-fired pots; at Meitetsu Department Store, 2-1 Meieki, I-chome, Nakamura-ku. Wales, Aberystwyth March 31-May 12 Buck ley Pottery from the 1300s to the 1940s; at Aber ystwyth Arts Centre, Penglais. Wales, Swansea through March 10 Buckley Pottery from the 1300s to the 1940s; at Glynn Vivian Art Gallery, Alexandra Rd. West Germany, Dusseldorf through March 18 “Hans Coper, 1920-1981”; at the Hetjens Mu seum, Schulstrasse 4. 88 CERAMICS MONTHLY
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