Category: Blog

Craft

Craft

What exactly is craft? To me the word ‘craft’ is a bit of a woolly term.  According to the Oxford English Dictionary it is both a verb and a noun: an activity involving skill in making things by hand,  and also work or objects made by hand. It carries connotations of both excellence and mastery in making and at the same time, it suffers from a lower status. Craft is often perceived as the country cousin of Art. Somehow making functional and practical pieces is not seen as glamorous or interesting–but I have a different opinion.[…]

The Routine of Risk

The Routine of Risk

Call me crazy, but I’ve noticed that the crows in my neighborhood are practicing good COVID prevention. They seem to be staying in small family groups and limiting their contact with other groups. There’s been no dive-bombing or food thievery, and while they’re not exactly washing their ‘hands’, they’ve taken to washing other things. We’ve recently put out a water dish for all the animals that visit our yard and they have been loving it! Half the time it’s a bath for the young bluejay siblings, and the rest of the time it’s a watering hole.[…]

Opening

Opening

As we creep along trying to make sense of our current, ongoing situations so many things are unknown. The world is trying to return to a level of familiarity–a bit more work for people, some small, safe gatherings, and more opportunities to support our local businesses with some curbside shopping. But some things are unchanging–traveling is still hard. Both my parents are older and live far away. I would love to go visit them soon, but it just feels too risky both for them and for me. However, it does seem like the right time to[…]

It’s all about virtual

It’s all about virtual

When almost all of the upcoming art shows got canceled or postponed or went virtual, I felt a kind of freedom. There was nothing to be applying for or promoting–there was nothing coming up. I didn’t have any should’s, so I could just make!  It’s been so fun and freeing, kind of like being a kid, I’ve just been playing, experimenting and following my curiosity. But now, I hear Mom calling, it’s time to go home and there are in fact, a few things coming up that need attention. The Contemporary Clay show at the Western[…]

In Gratitude

In Gratitude

I hope this finds you all well and staying safe in this new, stressful and uncertain time. This newsletter was going to be on throwing as a continuation of the previous one on handbuilding, but so much has changed since then. I wanted to just reach out to everybody instead. I know we’re all in this together, but of course everybody has their own things to deal with. Some have school age kids that are now distance-learning from home, some have been furloughed and don’t know about the future of work, and everyone is worried–about going[…]

Hand Building

Hand Building

I love hand building. It has to be the most basic and most ancient way to work with clay. It’s satisfying and instinctual and it can be done by anyone, anywhere. Pick up a lump of sticky mud and form it into a bowl or figure and it transforms into a way to hold water or remember your ancestors. While it is ancient, but it’s not simple or necessarily easy. There are plenty of techniques used in hand building that have to be mastered in order to achieve the effect you want. One of the things[…]

Strip It Down

Strip It Down

To get from a lump of clay to a finished work is a long and multi-stepped journey. Each material used and every step in the process can be tweaked. This can lead me to endless experimentation–and possible confusion. It’s been shown that more choices don’t make us happier and more satisfied with our decisions. Putting limits on what we explore in our art at any one time makes sense. So, what are your parameters? Do you strip it down, limiting your options and looking deeper into your choices? Or do you tackle all the areas that[…]

Place, Land and Earth

Place, Land and Earth

I think I might have fallen out of love with my town of Fairfax. It’s been feeling busy, noisy, and I live a little too close to my neighbors. Having walked to and from work for the past 14 years, I have a level of intimate familiarity with my neighborhood and the changes that occur through the year. Even though I’m attuned to my area, I have this longing for a piece of land that I know so well that it’s become a part of me. A place where I know the smells of the different[…]

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