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Sunday, November 26, 2023

Pottery Sale, Evening Pottery class in Winter, and last class week at YVC

Last class week: Raku, firings and Pottery Sale


This week is the last full week of winter quarter and a busy week in the clay studio. Tomorrow we will be running a raku firing for both classes and Tuesday is our pottery sale.


pottery sale poster for this fall

Pottery Sale Tuesday

The Pottery Sale features pottery and sculpture made by myself and Yakima Valley College clay students and employees over the past year or years. All work is for sale and very moderately priced, so it’s a great opportunity to pick up some handmade gifts for the holidays.

The clay sale features lots of bowls, mugs and vases and many one of a kind items

All proceeds from the clay sale go to support YVC clay studio operations, including paying our hourly worker and allowing us to purchase equipment and supplies not covered by studio fees. 

Palmer Martin Hall at YVC

The sale will be Tuesday, November 28 from 11-6pm in the lobby of Palmer Martin Hall (building 20) on the south side of the Yakima campus. We take cash, check, card, and even Apple pay, so put us on your schedule for Tuesday and stop by and see us.

Some tumblers from my home kiln that might end up in the clay sale

Evening Pottery Class in Winter

I’m also hoping to talk to visitors about the evening pottery class that I will be offering in the winter this year. I hear from students and community members who work during the day that they’d like to see an pottery evening class, but this is the first quarter in a long time when I’ve been able to offer it. I am hoping to reach those who don’t already know about it.

My work at Larson gallery (sold)

Last weeks of Central Washington Artists Exhibition at Larson Gallery

While on campus, please consider stopping by the Larson Gallery to check out the Central Washington Artists Exhibition, which is open 10-5 on Tuesday. I have two pieces in the show, including an award winner. I also have some pottery for sale in the front gallery at Larson.


Raku Firings Monday

Hot pot being put in a combustion bucket

Tomorrow is our raku firing for both clay classes. This firing process is lots of fun, as well as lots of work. Tomorrow we’ll be unloading three kilns we fired last week and loading up three more firings to make sure everything can get finished in time for their final critique next Monday. Those who choose to participate will load and unload the raku kiln throughout the day.

Hot pots ready to come out of the raku kiln

Western style raku is a fast firing where we take the work out of the kiln while it is hot (the glaze is literally molten when we first open the kiln) and put it into a bucket of combustibles. Alternatively, we take it out when it is hot and burn horsehair onto the surface. It’s a fun process to watch, but I’ll smell like a campfire when I get home.



I hope to see lots of folks at the Pottery Sale on Tuesday!
 

Tuesday, November 7, 2023

Central Washington Art Exhibition 2023

The award winning (and sold) Opuntia Verde, 2023


The 68th Annual Central Washington Artist Exhibition opened this past Saturday at Larson Gallery. The show runs through December 9, 2023


Orange Cactae, 2023, also in the CWAE show


I have two pieces in the show, and I won an award on Saturday for the green one. The award is the Lilian Adamns and Muriel Adams Memorial Award, sponsored by Leo Adams


my award from Saturday


The Larson Gallery is open Tuesday-Friday 10am-5pm and Saturdays 1-5pm. Admission is always free and open to the public. Larson Gallery is located on the southwest corner of 16th Avenue an Nob Hill Boulevard in the newest set of Yakima Valley College buildings, behind Taco Bell.


Another view of the green one


Besides my two artworks in the Central Washington show, I also have functional pottery for sale in the front sales gallery section of Larson Gallery. And if you're in town looking for fun activities, don't forget about the Yakima Valley Vintner's Tasting Room right next to Larson Gallery. Besides wine brewed by the award winning YVC Viticulture program, they also have non-alcoholic drinks and snacks.


another view of the orange one








Sunday, September 10, 2023

Labor Day Artist Tour Wrap up

 

My studio on Tour day

Last weekend was the Labor Day Tour of Artists Studios in Yakima. I hadn't posted here for over a month, in large part because I was getting ready for this. (Though we also took a 3 week vacation and I took a total break for the first time in years!)

sign for our tour


My home studio was on the Tour, along with 5 other sites. At my house, Monika Lemmon, Chris Otten, and Kayo Nakamura showed their work this year, too. All four of us have been teaching studio art classes at YVC this year, with Monika teaching drawing online and in Grandview, Chris teaching photography online and in Yakima, and Monika teaching drawing, painting, and printmaking in Yakima.

Drawings by Monika Lemmon

Monika showed her drawings and paintings and had some prints for sale. Chris showed his photography, and you can tell he's the photographer, because his is the only work display that wasn't photographed (he took pictures of everyones work and I took pictures of mine).

Installation detail by Kayo Nakamura

Kayo was new to the tour this year. She is a versitile mixed media artists and at the show she had prints and drawings as well as sculpture and installation. We also got to see some of her video projects. 

My bulbs on display (see if you can find Kayo's addition)

It was great fun having these 3 artists at my studio because we all get along very well and we got to hang out and get to know each other better. Though the tour was a bit less busy than last year at my studio, we did a lot of laughing during the down times.

my bulbs with a Kayo sculpture joining in 

As with the past two years of tour shows, my daughter and her friends (Dezignosaur) also showed their jewelry. The older girls are now in high school and the younger in middle school which changes their dynamic a bit. They started making jewelry during the pandemic when they didn't have much school, but they are a lot busier than they used to be now.

thrown jewelry bowl

This year I made a lot of new functional work, including some jewelry display pieces for Dezignosaur.

jewelry display vase

My "throwing prescription" had me on the wheel a lot this summer. By default, and when I'm not thinking very hard, I naturally throw bowls, so I had a lot of bowls on display and for sale this year. Honestly, I might have had too many, as it was hard to fit them on on my shelves.

new bowls for the tour

All this throwing, and the required glazing that must follow, also explains my absence from this blog this summer. As Chris put it, I have four jobs (teaching, ceramics, the union, and being a band mom), so some stuff doesn't get done.

rainbow mugs and bowl 

Besides lots of functional stuff, I've been throwing sculptural forms using the wheel this summer, too. 

thrown wall sculptures

The sculptural forms take a bit more time after throwing. I throw them, but then have to alter or combine the thrown forms. 

thrown and altered sculpture


I made several standing sculptures, as well as some wall pieces that I intend to display at the Larson Gallery for our faculy show in January 2024. However, I also threw some sculptures that are a little more interactivem, where the bulbs can be picked up and moved around.


thrown and altered sculpture


One of these sculptures sold at my show. When the buyer came back to purchase the sculpture, he asked if he could swap out some of the bulbs for others (I had three sculptures with moveable bulbs and a few extra bulbs on the table as well). 


...with some of the bulbs removed

Today is my last day of summer, as convocation starts tomorrow at YVC. I've got a very full fall, but I hope to still be able to finish more work before the January show. With that in mind, I better post this and get to work.


another moveable bulb sculpture



Sunday, July 9, 2023

Labor Day Artist’s Tour 2023

a couple of sculptures out of the bisque kiln this morning, with the brochure/mailer for the Tour


The Labor Day Weekend Artist's Tour in Yakima is coming up in less than two months! I want to invite anyone who is in the area to attend the tour. My home studio is on the tour and I will have lots of new functional pottery and sculpture, as well as new lawn sticks and hanging bulbs.


new lawn stick toppers waiting for glaze

I will also have the YVC studio faculty showing at my studio. Chris Otten, who teaches photography, and Monika Lemmon, who teaches drawing, were both at my studio last year, too. Kayo Nakamura, our new drawing, painting, and printmaking faculty will also be at my studio this year.


the poster for this year's tour

I've done this tour for the past two years. The tour is great fit for me, because folks can come to my studio, see my new work, and I don't have to cart it all somewhere else for a show. I can also hang out with my friends during the tour and I can take several days to clean up, rather than trying to set up in just one day. I'm looking forward to this year's tour, since I won't be finishing up radiation that week, like I was last year!

this year's tour brochure (inside)

Tickets are $10 each and you can purchase those tickets from me. I have them at home now and can get them to folks during the summer. I recommend purchasing tickets ahead of time so that you can get a booklet (and so we know we have enough). You can also purchase them at the studios on the day of the tour.
new bowls from my last cone 6 firing


There are more than 30 artists on the tour this year, at 6 locations. Visitors can come to any of the studios on Saturday, Sunday, or Monday (Labor Day), or spread their visits over multiple days. Saturday and Sunday the tour runs 10-4, Monday 10-12. Artists at all locations have work for sale. The artists' work spans a wide range of media and price levels. 

stacking sculptures in progress

I've been doing lots of new work this spring and summer and I'm excited to share. My daughter and her friends will again have their jewelry for sale again. I'm not sure how many of my stacking pieces (the new work I've been playing with for the faculty show in January), but I plan to glaze and fire about 50 more pieces of pottery before September!

bowls from the last two firings

I hope to see you in September. Please let me know if you'd like to purchase a ticket from me, and/or if you'd like me to send you a brochure for the event. I plan to send those out today (once I find my mailing list).

bulbs and lawn sticks waiting for more underglaze

 

Friday, June 30, 2023

Spring and Early Summer Studio Frenzy

newly glazed dishes laid out for photographing, inventory, and quality checks


It's been a minute since I last wrote about, well, anything. The end of the spring quarter and start of fall have been super busy and I've been spending so much time in the studio since classes ended (and even before that, really), that I wanted to put all that energy into that work, rather than writing about it.

a thrown sculpture I started in spring

I supposed the correlary is that today I feel more like writing than working (so far). 

Work waiting to be glazed, shoved out of the way while I make more

My throwing prescription is part of the reason that I've been in the studio so much. The other part is a couple of shows that I am looking forward to. First there is the Labor Day Artists Studio Tour in my home studio over Labor Day weekend. I've done this one the last two years and plan to invite the YVC art studio faculty to show at my place. That's Chris Otten (photography), Kayo Nakamura (our new full-time drawing/painting/printmaking instructor), and Monika Lemmon (drawing). 

bowls in the process of being glazed

The Labor Day weekend show is, for me at least, a chill way to invite folks to see my work and my studio. I don't have to move a bunch of stuff or set up a tent and I can be sure to be near a fan, shade, and cold drinks the whole time. All I need to do is clean my studio, which, admitteldy, is going to be harder this year.

stacked forms and some awards, as well as some mugs under plastic on my storage shelves

The next show I'm excited about is the Yakima Valley College faculty show at Larson Gallery. This will be in January of 2024. The gallery is huge and as soon as we confirmed that it will happen, I got really excited about a new body of work. 

the fired stacking pieces, last week, when I checked for fit and size 

I want to make these tall skinny stacked forms. As soon as the show was confirmed in April, I started throwing some pieces to be stacked. Most of them are simple round forms with flanges inside, measured (usually) to stack with others.

newly throwing stacking set with flanges

When I first started them in April, I was working on throwing just 30 minutes a day, in between class and grading and union work. I also didn't have a fully fleshed out plan about how these would work, so I threw a lot of short segment.


short stacking sets before firing

Once classes were over (the union work never stops, apparently), I got them all out and measured them and discovered I had quite a few unmatched sizes, so the batch from last week and this week is an attempt to match sizes. 

thrown parts of a multipart form in progress

I also started throwing taller pieces by attaching two thrown pieces once they had dried up a bit. I've never been someone who throws particularly large. My teaching demos are often fairly small both because I teach a lot of beginning throwing classes and because I am not allowed to keep anything I make on campus, and on campus is my main throwing time during the year.

a multipart form on the wheel (trying to show height, but I think I needed a tripod)

This throwing prescription, ironically, has got me throwing more often and with more challenging forms than I probably ever have before. It's kind of amazing how teaching people to throw (which is, granted, only 1/3 or less of my actual teaching job) requires less throwing than 30 minutes a day.

the piece on the floor is too tall for my shelves and wihin 1/4" of the height limit of my kiln

I realized the other day that my throwing skills have improved just since March. At least my skills or strength for throwing or combining to make tall forms.

my favorite textured surfaces take a lot of time

I am still more excited about the individual forms that have more going on, but combining forms sculpturally after throwing and working on complex surfaces both slow down the process a lot. My goal right now is really to make enough of the stacking forms for them to make an impact visually or spatially. I am trading off some of the complexity for some of the size and quantity.

even attaching things to the side takes more time than a vertical stack

Additionally, my high production means that I've got a significant amount of glazing that needs to happen and then I need to figure out where to put all this stuff, either while waiting for glaze, or after firing. 

bowls being glazed (and then stacked because I don't have enough surface for not stacking

I ended up pulling out a card table for glazing space since the functional forms have multiplied so much. The ones that have been fired I'm hoping to sell on the Labor Day weekend show or in galleries locally. I believe my brother already put in a hold on some. 

my glazing space is usually the workbench by the window, but I added a card table this summer

Starting the throwing prescription helped get me kick started into summer studio mode early this year, but it also has been somehow freeing. I know I have to throw something for 30 minutes a day and I'm nearing saturation on functional forms, so I finally got a chance the other day to throw some forms that I wanted to try for a sculptural form based on some diagrams of the lymphatic system I saw in the room during a Lymphedema appointment. 

my lymphedema inspired sculpture in progress

I was also able to throw some items on request from my daughter, as well as some forms I'd been meaning to try, like a citrus juicer form I'd never tried before and some displays for earrings for my daughter's projects. 

pierced bowls for hanging earrings

After two or three rounds of glazing functional forms, this week I got excited about getting some glazing done on some sculptural forms I had started during the spring.

sculpture in progress from spring

This week I've had trouble finding the time and energy. I had some medical appointments (oncology and blood work and shots) this week and they've put me on something new (because, apparently, you aren't supposed to have 8-12 hot flashes a day, who knew!). We had union stuff scheduled this week as well as some unscheduled concerns about folks not getting paid correctly.  

one of the first thrown forms for my throwing prescription

Meanwhile, my daughter was supposed to go to Louisville for TSA (Technology Student Association) Nationals, but her and the 22 others with her got stuck in the Denver airport for 2 days (~22 hours before they finally got a hotel!) because United had staffing problems and (I think) because the Northeast had weather or smoke. They ended up flying the kids home yesterday instead of sending them on to Louisville and the kid is obviously super disappointed.

thrown and textured sculpture in progress

I was almost suprised how much it impacted me. Apparently I worry, but having her stuck in a different city and I can't do anything about it doesn't make for restful nights and calm days (also, see above, 8-12 hot flashes in 85 degree weather). I know I didn't need to worry, but my body didnt hear that message. Yesterday, with her on the ground in Seattle and after 4 in a row union meetings, I literally lay down on my face on the computer room floor for 30 minutes to ease my pounding head. 

My June trip to Clay Art Center necessitated by the need for more clay and more kiln shelves

I feel like I've been all over the place in what I'm working on in the studio this summer, and also this post. The other thing we did this week was replace the aluminum barrel of my pug mill with a stainless steel one, a surprisingly labor intensive process. But that's a topic for another day.

my studio assistant daughter texturing a small form


For today, I'm glad to have my studio helper back, even though I also feel super terrible for her having to miss nationals. She's sleeping now after a trip that included all the worst parts about air travel (excessive turbulence, long delays, unboarding because of those delays, trying to sleep in an airport, trying to arrange for alternate flights--with a group of middle- and high-school students who were required to stay with their advisor, long --like 8 hour!-- customer service lines, food vouchers that didn't work, and finally lost luggage) without any of the good parts (like getting to your intended destination).  On the plus side, she said that its better in some ways to be in this situation with a big group because some people can always stay with the luggage while others walk around or, apparently, race on the moving sidewalk.