برچسب: Pottery

  • Lake Superior Pottery | Jonathan Walberg

    Lake Superior Pottery | Jonathan Walberg


    Jonathan Walberg | Episode 1093

    Jonathan Walberg’s techniques and methods are influenced by his apprenticeship at St. John’s Pottery in Minnesota (2004-06) under Richard Bresnahan, studies in Karatsu, Japan (2006-10) and in Ulsan, Korea (2010).  These experiences nurtured a love of clay, the use of local materials, clay history, and wood-kilns. Jonathan creates on a Japanese-style wooden kick wheel and processes local clays and ashes for pottery use just south of Bayfield in Washburn, WI. Jonathan uses beach-sand from the South Shores of Lake Superior mixed into porcelain. This creates random black spots from the iron-rich sand. The local clay is also iron-rich and is mixed into the clay or glaze creating rich dark greens, reds, browns and blacks. Jonathan makes traditional ash-glazes from local Maple and Oak trees.

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    How do you balance being true to yourself and faithful to your customers?

    Well I think me wanting to be a maker, I love making, and finding things that customers enjoy using things that I make is rewarding in its own way. I think creating the variety of work, things that I enjoy making and the things I know that will sell. That’s kind of the bread and butter. My favorite thing to make would be mugs not only because they are my best seller but also I love the interaction the customer has with the mug.

    Making pottery can be isolating. Do you see the introvert and extrovert parts of you both need to be fed?

    Exactly. I am a good balance of both aspects of introvert and extrovert. I love my alone time but I love that customer interaction time. I know that it’s not for everybody. When I go to shows I am hyper interactive with customers. I love it.

    How do you budget for your year as a full time potter?

    Being self employed every waking moment that I have to be either making pots or with my family. If I am not with my family I should be making pots. And I struggle with the work-life balance. Mainly because I love what I do.

    As a business owner do you keep track of all your expenses for tax purposes?

    Certainly. I think for tax purposes it’s a little difficult because a lot of my work is sweat equity and tears and a lot of elbow grease. When you are not buying a lot of materials you don’t have a  whole lot of expenses as far as materials are concerned. But you’ve spent months preparing your ash glaze or days screening your clay. And that doesn’t have a dollar amount attached to it.

    Is it realistic for young artists to become full-time artists or a full-time potter?

    Yeah. People say that this generation will not be as well off as the previous but I think the standard of living has increased so much that it’s hard to see the forest through the trees. My parents grew up with one vehicle and one phone that was attached to the wall. Nowadays our modern conveniences cause us to live with such high standards. Higher standards than my parents ever had. I think it’s all really relative.

    What advice would you give to a young potter who wants to become a full-time potter?

    Grab every opportunity you have to experience life within that world. Be it to visit a firing, to travel and visit potters, try to grab onto real life situations and experiences that either help you network or just create life experiences that will benefit you in the future.

    Book

     

    The Unknown Craftsman by Soetsu Yanagi

    Contact

    lakesuperiorpottery.square.site

    Instagram: @jonathanwalburg





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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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