Every vase ever created has it's own story. Some vases are strategically hand-built from coils or slabs of clay. Other vases are "thrown" on the potter's wheel with steady hands and a vision of transforming a hunk of clay into something stunning.
The vases here, were created on the potter's wheel. For the Under The Influence show at BAYarts, we were to chose a master painter or potter that inspires us and create a body of work. The artist I chose as my inspiration is master painter, Mark Rothko.
Rothko, had the ability to capture moods and emotions in his color field paintings with only a few colors. With these Rothko inspired vases, I use a few colors to capture the viewer for a few lingering moments. My goal is for the viewers to be as captured by the content in these vases as I was captured by the content in Mark Rothko's color field paintings (below). To view more pottery created by our advanced students for the Under The Influence show at BAYarts click on the link below or come stop by the Sullivan Family Gallery in the historic Fuller House. If you are interested in buying a vase please contact info@bayarts.net or nfraley10@gmail.com
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My location: In front of Huntington Bank in downtown Berea.All of this rain and snow (yes, snow in the middle of April) has had me in the studio creating more than ever. Not only have I been creating new pottery pieces, but I have learned to recycle clay for our workshops and classes at BAYarts. Some people dread the clay recycling processes because they can be tedious, strenuous, skin-drying and frustrating. I'm not going to lie, at first I found it frustrating. But now that I am settled in and organized, I find some techniques of recycling clay to be quite the arm/back workout and an excellent stress reliever. It's a great feeling to reuse forgotten clay scraps that people left behind (both white and brown clay) and give them a new life. I believe It gives the maker an even stronger connection to the clay they use. You will see a clay recycling tutorial in the future. This May, when the flowers will (hopefully) be blooming, there will be new additions to the FrayedAndFragile pottery inventory which includes pieces made from recycled clay (white, brown and mixed). I'm really happy with the results I am seeing. I really love the speckles in the brown Laguna clay and the serenity of their white clay.
In the future I want to ONLY use recycled clay for all of my work. It will be hard to keep up with the hand-recycling and becoming more familiar with the pug machine, but there is something about these processes that has made me fall in love with pottery all over again. "The best way to predict the future is to create it."- Peter Drucker |