Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Off to Seattle and NCECA




We're hoping we'll find Seattle in the grip of spring when we get there late Thursday. Doubt it, though. It's been in the 70s here on Cape Cod the past couple of days, but Seattle hangs in with 40s and cold. We'll survive.
Visiting our son Marcus and his wife Anastasia there in that great city on the coast. And I'll head to NCECA for three days of looking at and talking about clay. Looking forward to it.
Any bloggers or blog-readers who are going to be there, look me up.
Meantime, Alex will be equipping her dragon with its last two feet and then hoping it will dry slowly and evenly over the next couple of weeks.
Photos: A previous spring in Seattle's arboretum; our two young folks who have now been married ... ummm ... almost seven years?; and intern Alex's growing dragon, now sporting front legs.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Round Three: Kline and Philbeck on Cape Cod






Back by popular demand ... well, two of you asked to see more photos ... I'm going to post another five photos of Ron Philbeck and Michael Kline at work at Barnstable High School this weekend, in their two-day workshop for the Cape Cod Potters. Not much narration is necessary, so here we go ...
Photos: Top, Ron is about to finish off a "knobenall" jar, with potter Frances Johnson, department head in this high school studio, watching; Michael taking the torch to a jug, hastening the drying process; Ron pulling a mug handle; Michael talking about his pots with a workshop participant; an aerial view of Ron demonstrating his sgraffito technique.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Genuine handcraft ... Kline and Philbeck






I have always been one to notice hands. I have no idea why. But I could pick out my son, my grandmother, my friend Jim Beckman from elementary school, my friend and pottery teacher Dan Finnegan ... hundreds of people, I think, just by seeing their hands. So when I shoot photos of people at work, somewhere in amongst all the images you will find hands. More so with potters or woodworkers or musicians, all of whom do their work with their hands.
Because Ron Philbeck and Michael Kline transmit the work of their brain to the clay through their hands, they made great subjects for photographs. Michael with big, strong hands and one missing forefinger digit on his right hand. Ron with more slender but no less strong hands from his years of throwing pots. Centering, throwing, pulling up, pulling out, picking off the wheelhead, trimming feet, adding handles, brushing on slip or cutting through it. It all requires hands.
So, here are four images of the two men at work on Sunday at the workshop they presented at Barnstable High School on Cape Cod. Extremely talented and well-spoken men, quick with stories about their lives and jibes at each other, well worth scheduling if you're looking for a traveling roadshow of two very different but equally talented potters. And there is one image here of the hands of Falmouth potter Sarah Caruso, trying her own hand at Ron's sgraffito style.
If you want more photos of them throwing or trimming, let me know and I'll post them.
Photos: Michael Kline showing newly attached handles; Ron Philbeck rabbiting up a yunomi; Michael demonstrating slip-dipping style; Ron knobbing a lid (note the turtle on the splash pan); Sarah Caruso working on a spider tile.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Big pots, small pots, medium pots ...






Two of North Carolina's finest and most congenial potters came to Cape Cod this weekend, throwing pots and trading stories at the big pottery studio at Barnstable High School in Hyannis. Ron Philbeck and Michael Kline came this way from a gig a few days ago at LibertyTown Arts Worshop, Dan Finnegan's art empire headquarters in Fredericksburg, Va. They did a few hours in F-burg, but we get them for the whole weekend.
It's after midnight here. We had a bit of a potluck party at Gail Turner's after the workshop and I staggered in here just a short while ago. I don't have a great deal of energy right now for writing, so this will be short. Many pots thrown today. They'll get their slipping and decorating Sunday. Also, a lot of people went home with Kline and Philbeck pots. Pretty cool.
Photos: Top, ribbing on a big one, by Michael Kline; Ron Philbeck's concentration on a small jug; both potters at work in front of the workshop folks; potters Kim Medeiros of Pocasset and Peg Andre of Wellfleet, checking out Philbeck's work; a fine selection by Kline.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

There's hand-crafted and then "hand crafted" ...




We expect to see hand-crafting of the genuine kind this weekend at Barnstable High School in Hyannis, when Michael Kline and Ron Philbeck bring their traveling pot-making road show to Cape Cod.
Michael and Ron, both of North Carolina, were in Fredericksburg, Va., last weekend for a workshop and will show up here Saturday to team up on pots and decorating. Word is that people are still calling to get into the workshop. For information and details, go to http://capecodpotters.org/workshops.htm
The workshop is sponsored by the Cape Cod Potters, the same group that helped bring Hannah McAndrew and Doug Fitch here from the UK last spring. We're expecting the same high quality of work, though that means the two North Carolinians will have to meet some high standards.
Photos: Top, a wonderful Michael Kline jug from the Ferrin Gallery in Pittsfield, Ma.; one of Ron Philbeck's great sgraffitoed platters; and at bottom, something I saw the other day at WalMart which just pissed me off. Apparently the marketing people at WalMart think calling factory-made work "hand made" adds value to a $3.58 mug. "Special glazing technique makes every piece unique." Right ...
Anyway, nothing like that this weekend with Kline and Philbeck.

Lotsa bowls in this one ...






I fired yesterday, with 50 small teabowls for Lois Hirshberg's tea ceremony show at the Cotuit Arts Center, and another 25 or so soup bowls for the Cape Cod Potters' Soup Bowls for Hunger event next month. Plus a few tests of glazes on intern Alex Urbina's stuff and some other things.
There were a lot of pots in there, but the firing went off as it usually does, steady climbs and reduction at the right time.
The result was a group of pretty good pots, most made with the rough clay I use that combines Miller 750 with crushed granite and iron sand. We're off to Seattle later this month to see our son and daughter-in-law and for me to go to NCECA. So I wanted to clear out these obligations before going back on the road.
Still building inventory for the summer, also.
This weekend is the Michael Kline/Ron Philbeck workshop at Barnstable High School in Hyannis. I'll be joining a lot of my friends there, including the two visiting North Carolina potters, who have been blogging friends for some time. But I've never met either of them, though I've admired their pots. I'm looking forward to the weekend.
Photos: Cups for the tea ceremony show; a lovely little cup of poured Shinos; Nuka jar and Shino jar; cracked shallow Shino bowl; another shallow Shino bowl with a bit of poured Nuka.


Sunday, March 11, 2012

Here be dragons ...




Glazing for the next firing was postponed Sunday morning when intern Alex Urbina arrived to continue work on her dragon. This complex and mythical animal is patterned roughly on Chinese ceremonial dragons. Right down to the scales, teeth and whiskers. Assuming it survives the drying, bisque firing and glaze firing, it should be one of the coolest things in the intern/mentor show at the Cape Museum of Art in May. Alex intends to glaze it in Shino of one type or another. We're looking at a carbon-trap dragon here, I think.
Alex is a hard worker and arrives at the studio when she says she will. She's had to learn to center clay on the wheel, throw decent cylinders and use the slab roller (scales for the dragon) to complete this project. Right now, the dragon is being built on a full Skutt kiln shelf, so that once it's dry it can be lowered into the bisque kiln. Both of us are keeping fingers crossed on the whole project.
I'll go back to glazing later this afternoon.