برچسب: Bigger

  • Woodfire, Leadership, Bigger Pots | Kayla Noble

    Woodfire, Leadership, Bigger Pots | Kayla Noble


    Kayla Noble | Episode 1039

    Kayla Noble is a second generation potter, born and raised in New York’s Hudson Valley. Kayla is the current Woodfire Artist in Residence at The Clay Studio of Missoula in Missoula, MT. Kayla enjoys exploring the potential of clay in atmospheric conditions and the possibility for conversations that can happen with an ember-bed.

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    What do you love most about the community that is gathered around wood fired pottery?

    Oh man, it’s just so much passion. Everyone there is really excited to be there.

    Is there a sweet spot in a kiln that you want to see your pieces in?

    I like the fire box right in the front of the kiln. I like to have my work touching the ember bed because I really like the texture and color and all the action that happens there. So I want them in the fire.

    Is there a right way to bring leadership to a wood firing?

    I think it’s having intention because whether you are intentional or not as a leader you are still going to be influencing and impacting people. So I think it means coming with awareness, coming with the ability to listen, and then also coming with the ability to make decisions and be decisive and communicate that in, I guess, an elegant fashion, with grace.

    How do you have control while being a leader in community of where you want their pots to turn out good and you want that sweet spot for your pots?

    It’s a mutual trust that has to be involved. The community that comes to fire with me, they are coming to fire with me hopefully because they trust me and they are going to trust my choices. And when you are going to choose to work with someone and you choose to fire with someone you have the opportunity to look at their work and decide if their firing style might or might not work for you. And what’s great about this residency is it changes every two years. If my firing style does not suit someone’s work there is opportunity to work with other people. So I do my best to ensure that everyone’s work is placed in the kiln to best serve the work and the community trusts my choices.

    When you build larger pots is there a danger spot where you have to get through this part and then you are good but everything has the potential of falling apart before then?

    Like with construction?

    Yes.

    Not that I have found, for me. I have had a relatively easy time building the forms that I make.

    How thick do the walls have to be to support a three foot tall pot?

    With my clay I am building about a half inch wide. So objectively thin, it just depends on your clay body, really. Different clays might need to be thicker or thinner. I am building table top size about a quarter of an inch and then the bigger pots I try to keep as thick as my thumb.

    How important is wood type for firing?

    I feel like the answer is just, Yes. (laughter)  Different woods will burn differently. I’m now from moving from New York to Montana and firing with a completely different type of wood. So that means I am adjusting my clay bodies and firings to suit the wood. The wood is extremely important and what you get is what you get too. So it’s just learning how to work with what is growing near you.

    Book

    Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit 

    Contact

    kaylanoble.com

    Instagram: @mud_wench





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  • Pottery For A Bigger Purpose | Eric Rempe

    Pottery For A Bigger Purpose | Eric Rempe


    Eric Rempe | Episode 1110

    Eric Rempe first touched clay when he was in high school in Lancaster, PA. Eric has a BFA in ceramics from Penn State University and an MFA in ceramics from San Diego State University. Eric now lives in Princeton, NJ and he teaches ceramics at Princeton Day School.

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    Why is it that teachers are able to make such a big impact?

    I think students that are ready to hear a particular message, that’s when you can have the biggest impact and that might happen in a science classroom or an art classroom, a garden, a lot of places. I think they are developing a sense of who they are and you might be there at that right moment with that right thought.

    If you could finish this sentence what word would you use and why? I am not teaching clay, I am teaching _____.

    Belief in themselves. Because I think it is the first step to teaching so many other aspects of what you want to teach.

    You just finished Empty Bowls. Why do you think something as humble as ceramics could have the impact of 250,000 meals?

    I think because it brings so many people together from the making side of it, so for example I make 50 bowls that are really, really smooth that are meant for drawing and I ask for faculty volunteers that want to draw and people come out of the wood work for those. I give them underglaze pencils and they draw and my students draw on an iPad and turn them into decals and all these people from different parts of the community come together on one night. It celebrates the school and at the same time makes a significant difference for other people.

    Why is ceramics important for the student who may not be interested in a career in ceramics or teaching ceramics?

    I would say that is probably true for most students. I don’t think a huge amount of my students are going to go on and make a living at it or anything. I have a lot of students who stay in touch with me and it’s a part of their life and they have Instagram accounts and post their pottery, but they haven’t become full time potters. I am not in the business of trying to place kids in college programs, I am in the business of trying to get kids to believe in themselves. So that belief in themselves can have pretty far reaching impact.

    What makes a high school program important for the student that wants to go on to be a professional artist?

    I’ve got one, she started with me in eighth grade and then took four years with me in upper school. So I got to work with her for four and half years and she got accepted into a fine arts program for ceramics and she has gone on and she’s someone who can do it. She has a tremendous amount of drive and a tremendous amount of belief in herself.

    Why clay for you?

    If we are setting teaching aside and just talking about what has kept me making pots all these years is the number of times I get emails or texts or photographs of my pots being used and people will say some variation of the message, I use your mug every single morning and if it’s dirty and I have ten clean ones in the cupboard I’ll wash your dirty one because I don’t want to use the other ones. I am not solving world problems with  my pots but they are important enough in someone’s life that is making that moment in the morning more rich in some way, or more meaningful in some way.

    Book

    The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien

    Contact

    rempepottery.com

    Instagram: @rempepottery





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