Gillian McMillan — Rara Avis
31Mar/110

Eliza Wang’s ‘Harmony’ potpourri jar

The other day Eliza Wang sent me a link for a poster. It announces the winners of "The Shoulders We Stand On", a Potters' Council show being presented at this year's NCECA in Florida. It's so exciting that her work has been selected.

http://ceramicartsdaily.org/potters-council-members/announcing-winners-of-2011-potters-council-juried-show/

Click on the link to see the poster with photos of 5 pieces in the show and the list of other winners. The opening reception is tomorrow, April 1st so if you're at NCECA now don't miss it! Sadly Eliza won't be there.

This is the Artist's Statement Eliza wrote to accompany her work. So apart from a very elegant and masterfully made piece she made it even more interesting to my Western eyes by explaining the importance of the Lotus plant. To this statement Eliza has added this:

"The knob on the top of the pot is a frog. The Chinese meaning behind the frog is to keep evil energy away and bring in good luck and fortune. And in Western culture the frog is a pleasant creature that represents good fortune and is a symbol of magic."

Congratulations Eliza from all the TriCity Potters!

Artist Statement

My work is about balance and fusion: The balance between form and surface design and the fusion of western culture and my Chinese heritage. Using nature as my inspiration, I like to infuse Chinese meaning into my pieces by celebrating the symbolism behind particular animals, plants and flowers.

 

More often than not, the symbols and motifs seen on Chinese decorative arts are not merely decorative but represent hidden meanings that convey wishes for good things in life. These pictorial puns can be "read" for their inspirational meanings.

 

The Meaning of the Pot

Different parts of the Lotus bear auspicious meanings. The flower symbolizes marriage and purity. The seedpod bursting with seeds symbolizes fertility. The Lotus also means harmony and peace.

28Mar/110

Vincent Massey’s platter workshop

Vincent Massey's weekend workshop at Coquitlam's Place des Arts was a great success. 30 keen potters were so happy with what they'd been shown. I popped in at the very end in time for Vincent's critique of their mostly finished slab, texture and extrusions platters. And I saw his demo platters - luscious! I was told I'd missed an excellent video too, taken in Whistler. I'll link a nice Picasa photo album with music that our tech and photographer Christine Eastlick has put together. Thanks Christine! I think it will also appear on http://www.tricitypotters.ca/ along with an account of the workshop.

https://picasaweb.google.com/christine.eastlick/Movies?authkey=Gv1sRgCPKc5ZPbm4nidQ&feat=email#5589251590324132450

Here are some of my photos - people moved! 

25Mar/110

Vincent Massey workshop in Coquitlam

Tomorrow Vincent Massey will be giving a workshop at Place des Arts, Coquitlam. This is a joint offering between Place des Arts and our TriCity Potters. The event is sold out and will, I'm sure, leave the attendees enthused about new ways to handbuild platters and trays. This was our poster for the event - assembled by our board member Christine Eastlick.

More information about Vincent can be found at his website:      http://www.vincentmasseypottery.com/

19Mar/110

Heather Cairns spoke to TriCity Potters

Wednesday's meeting of TriCity Potters was another friendly and informative session. I mentioned to the group that we've already been asked if we'd like to make candlesticks/holders for an Amnesty International fundraiser in the Fall. As we like to have a group making session we may well do this at our June meeting.

I wrote a little blurb about Heather Cairns' presentation for the TriCity Potters' website:     http://www.tricitypotters.ca/hot2.html

Basically it is this plus some photos of Heather demonstrating to the group. Members had lots of questions. I would hope that speakers I invite will inspire some new ideas or at least a reason to get back to the studio.

'Our guest for the March meeting was North Vancouver potter Heather Cairns.
After introductory classes at Vancouver's Peg's Place 'way back when', Heather came back to pottery from some time raising children and being a pre-school teacher. A 3-week course with Jeff Oestreich in 1992 and many other workshops led her to work as tech and teacher at Delbrook Community Centre in North Van. For many years she supplied 11 galleries between here and Winnipeg, at first with labour-intensive raku work and later with cheerful painted cone 6 functional ware. She demonstrated some of her underglaze painting on bone dry samples, using sponge brushes (from Lee Valley), brushes and a fine slip trailer. Heather is obviously a painter as well as a potter. Members had lots of questions on her technique. Thanks for a well-planned presentation Heather.'

When I was introducing her Heather reminded me that we originally met at that important Jeff Oestreich class at ECU in 1992. For several of us local potters it was a challenging and exciting 3 weeks. Jeff worked with us all the time - never mind the class times. We saw movies together, we were given assignments like we'd never tackled before, we ate group meals, collaborated on designs, had group critiques and all pushed our work way beyond the safe into new, personal directions. I thank Jeff for one of the most inspiring workshops I've ever taken.

Since Wednesday June reported that the Gogos Bowl event raised over $11,000. for the Stephen Lewis Foundation. Feels good.

15Mar/110

Two more UK potters, earth and salt

When Alan and I led that tour of potteries and archaeology in 2005 we met several potters who each made a special effort for our group. Of course they showed us their studios and kilns but Richard Batterham pulled a handle for us, Lawrence McGowan painted a pot with calligraphic designs, Jonathon Garrett threw a vast flower pot, John Leach threw a jug and we watched Walter Keeler firing his salt kiln. Such memories! We also came across the work of other potters and added their names to the list of people to visit next time. So far there hasn't been another tour, mainly because costs grew enormously but with my Ceramic Review subscription I keep my eye on my favourites.

I bought an outrageous mug made by Richard Godfrey, all I could reasonably afford. It is pale earthenware sprayed with really brightly coloured slips &/or underglazes and finished with a clear glaze. I enjoy looking at it but don't actually use if for tea or coffee  very often even though it's capacious because the lip is flared out too much. Drinking is tricky and the drink goes cold. Maybe I should post pictures of and critique more of our collection!

Richard's process is very much like what I do only with even brighter yellow and red. Mine are painted when leather hard, his are sprayed when bone-dry but both are earthenware. He makes marvellous Space-Ship Teapots and extraordinary  Jugs. On facebook this week Richard's pots have been posted by Peter Lane of Online Ceramics and I commented on a very interesting bowl. It uses the typical bold red and some blue on the bowl but the base is finished with white terra sigillata, burnishing and some sort of pit-fire. Challenging but effective combination of finishes. Here it is, and with Richard to show the size. We had arranged to meet him and see his Devon studio on our second tour which never happened.

 

 

Another potter whose work Al and I noticed was Steve Harrison. His work is also wheelthrown and functional but it is salt-glazed. There is a real familiarity and reference to ceramic history in his forms. Thinking about Primavera, the fine craft shop in Cambridge where we first saw his work I googled him to have another look yesterday. Lo and behold he has designed a small portable salt kiln. On the spur of the moment I emailed him to ask for details - a kiln-builder, in England? What am I thinking? A small kiln, in Port Moody, using propane? Mm. He suggested I phone him on Saturday. Probably I should tell him I'm just dreaming.

Here is a photo of two of his jugs from his website.

The choice of these two potters reflects the contrast between the two sorts of work I am currently working on. Both sorts are wheelthrown, altered and assembled and on the whole I make jugbirds, but the finishing is so different. The red earthenware ones take quite a while to slip-paint to give them their recognizable and jolly personalities. The salt-fired stoneware pieces can be just as animated but their feathers, beaks and markings come from spraying slips, latex and wax-resisting also before the bisque-firing. So the big difference comes from the second firing - electric, cone 04 versus gas-fired salt at cone 10 plus. I find that the 'general public' likes the low-fire, brightly coloured ones and potters prefer the salt ones.

13Mar/110

Heather Cairns, next TCP presenter

Tomorrow the fellow executive members of TriCity Potters will meet here to discuss final arrangements for next Wednesday's meeting, the Vincent Massey workshop in a couple of weeks and other speakers and hands-on activities for the rest of the year. June MacDonald spoke to Fraser Valley Potters Guild last Thursday so she can tell us all about that. It was a dreadfully rainy night for June to drive out to Surrey but I gather she had Eliza Wang's company for the drive. Linda and I had tickets to the Opening Gala evening of Port Moody Canadian Film Festival and saw 'Incendies'. It won the best film Genie award that night! And it's a moving, thought-provoking film, set in Canada and Lebanon with a shocking revelation at the end. We heard that we had all voted it the best of the festival this evening.

Heather Cairns of North Vancouver will be TriCity Potters featured speaker at our Wednesday March 16th meeting. 7pm at Port Moody Senior Secondary School. All are welcome. Heather's work is wheel-thrown, functional cone 6, decorated with colours and black brush-strokes. She plans to show pictures of her work and do a demonstration of her painting technique. These photos were taken at the Gallery of BC Ceramics in February.

13Mar/110

Thomas Aitken & Kate Hyde speaking at ECUAD

Tuesday's Gogos 'Soup's On' event went very well. All the volunteers made sure things went smoothly. Soup was delicious, appies, bread and desserts were good. There was a no-host bar and lots of silent auction items. We were entertained by an excellent teenage singer and I don't have her name. One of the Gogos who has been to Africa gave a slide show of the work that is supported by this sort of fundraiser. I'm very happy that TriCity Potters contributed to such a worthy cause.

The very next morning I received an email from Hazel Postma to ask if our next community contribution might not be some candlesticks for an Amnesty International evening in the Fall. Why not?

Later that day fellow Port Moody potter Clive Tucker phoned to ask if I intended to attend a NW Ceramic Foundation lecture at ECUAD so I was pleased to have company for the drive in. Speakers were husband and wife ceramic artists Thomas Aitken and Kate Hyde from Ontario. They met at Cardiff while studying for their Ceramics MAs and now operate a studio and gallery in rural Ontario. They fire to cone 6, in oxidation. His work is skilled and functional, glazed in pleasing colours. Kate draws on paper and fabric and on pots that he has thrown. It is a delightful combination for their customers.  Thomas and Kate were apparently working with current ECUAD students this week. For more information on them check their website       http://www.thomasaitken.com/samples2.html

I mentioned to Thomas that he and Kate must live quite near my Medalta buddy Brenda Sullivan. He was delighted to tell me that he had written her letter of reference for her residency! He and Kate were at Medalta in 2009 when Vancouverites Gail Carney and Amy Gogarty were residents there. Soda changes their work quite a bit! Thomas had seen my salty jugbirds on Granville Island and said the same thing of my work. Now I have more people to visit in Ontario...

These well-attended lectures are always a fun chance to catch up with other potters. I was pleased to connect with Sally Michener to give her a box of masses of my glaze tests. She had put a call out to BCPG members for shards to cover her latest sculptures and was pleased that her old students helped out. It's great to find a good use for those colourful slip, underglaze and glaze test tiles rather than using them as landfill!

8Mar/110

Coquitlam Gogos Soup’s On for African Grandmothers

Tickets are all gone for tonight's fundraising event. TriCity Potters donated 163 (at last count) bowls to be used for this supper. Guests will find a napkin-wrapped bowl at their place, donated appies, bread and other snacks. The bowl will be filled with choice from two vegetarian soups and can then be taken home afterwards. We are told there will be entertainment, silent auction and door prizes. I'll let you know how it went!

Meanwhile the publicity went well. Hannah Diamond sent a press release to our two local papers and I wound up being the potter available for photos to accompany the news. Here are the links to both front-page spots from last Friday. I'm not sure that they actually work - but I must get to the studio now..

www.thenownews.com for March 4th 2011
www.tricitynews.com
file:///Users/gillianmcmillan/Desktop/www.thenownews.com:%202.webloc
file:///Users/gillianmcmillan/Desktop/issuu.com:tricitynews:docs:tricitynews_030411.webloc
2Mar/110

Stoneware clean-up, now earthenware again

Yesterday I was surprised to open my BC Potters Guild newsletter and see that editor Melany Hallam has used my 'Making Jugbirds' slide show in a little article there. Very nice. After a month or so the newsletters are available to anyone visiting the guild website.       www.bcpotters.com click on 'archives'

Busy day today. Following up from a press release sent to the two local papers two photographers asked to come by. They asked to take photos of some of the bowls that were donated by TriCity Potters for the Coquitlam Gogos fundraising Soup Dinner next Tuesday. I guess I was the only member available who also had some of the bowls here. We'll see in Friday's papers how I/they look!

Then Hannah Diamond came by to collect the bowls. She says there have been over 125 donated so the event should be a great success.

Yesterday I sprayed my 13 stoneware pieces with slips ready for bisque firing. After that they'll only need liner glaze and wadding for the salt kiln. Now I've wedged some nice new Darcy's earthenware and have begun to throw parts for lots of new jugbirds. That Studio Tour in April is coming up soon.

Here are the stoneware pieces drying. Slip has been painted on the beaks/spouts and eyes and painted with latex resist before the spraying. I hope for a sharp contrast between the two colours. There are also some wax resist brush strokes on the 'wings'.