Jen Woodin

Jennifer Woodin is uniquely qualified, not only  to teach ceramics, but to encourage her students to understand futuristic technology related to clay. Her first degree, from California State U in Chico, is in engineering and for several years she worked in the field of mechanical and civil engineering. When in Chico, Jen took some pottery classes and eventually decided to change careers and get an MFA in Ceramics at Univ of Oregon, but with a decidedly engineering focus.

http://www.jenniferwoodin.com/bio.html

Jen has had a most interesting career so far, combining both fields in the years since. During a residency at the International Ceramics Research Center in Denmark,  she produced Duchamp-inspired ‘feminine urinals’ and even amusing ‘potty bowls’. She designed and made platinum lustre decals and studied 3D printing in clay very early in that technology. 

potty bowls
3D printed cups

For her talk to TriCity Potters last Wednesday evening Jen sent us photos of 3D-printed objects to illustrate her topic. One is the computer model of the form and the top geologic piece (which is a local mountain) has been printed using two colours of soft clay. 

In the cups above, you’ll see that 3D-printed objects can be manipulated to print a hexagonal base which changes to a circle top, and vice versa. In introducing brush strokes of cobalt during the printing she is exploring collaborating with a machine. 

Jen has a particular passion for bees. We all know that our food supply would mostly cease to exist if bees weren’t around to distribute pollen. I didn’t know that honey bees are introduced to North America and that bumble bees, Mason bees and solitary wild bees need to be encouraged here.

On a project with Hudson Valley Bee Habitat she coordinated a project which is ‘saving the bees through the arts’. It started with printing flower-like habitat for bees in plastic. But those melted in New York state’s hot summer and it made much more environmental sense to use clay instead.

At another residency, this time at the Netherlands Work Centre where there are vast kilns, her engineering self scanned flowers and used a CNC router to cut plater molds into hexagon tile forms. These were filled with a mixture of dry clay, soil and flower seeds. Fellow artists placed these in fields where the clay will dissolve and the seeds will grow the flowers needed by bees.  

Hudson Vallery Seed Hub project
bee habitat

Solitary bees make their nursery in cavities in old logs and twigs, but happily adopt cardboard tubes as a home base.

 Jen says that each honey bee only makes 1/12th of a teaspoon of honey in its lifetime. 3D-printed wee spoons illustrate this very effectively. 

Since moving to BC in 2019 Jen has joined the Native Bee Society of BC and has made the preservation of our local bee population a personal priority.

honey spoons
BC Coastal Bumble Bees
Bumble Bee

Please forgive my poor distorted photos of projected images.

Back to pottery..  with the beautiful colours to be found on our native bees Jen has a project to make pots shaped like this, bee-shape without limbs, as vases on which she can apply the colours of endangered bumble bees of BC. I have a feeling they may be made using a mould. But, in spite of undertanding and using other technologies I’m told Jen is also a wheel-thrower!

After giving us a fascinating overview of her engineering, ceramics and bee career so far, Jen then had us participate in a small bee enhancement project of our own. She asked us each to make a little pinch pot with D’Arcy Redart earthenware clay (my favourite). Then she had us fill it with a dry mixture of 3 parts soil, 4 parts powdered Redart clay and 1 part local wildflower seed, and then fold and seal it into a little dumpling or wonton. We each took one home and once it’s dry we’re to toss it into a likely wilderness, the clay will split open and, with the soil, it’ll form a fine home for the seeds to grow!

Jen explains the pyrogy making
members making

We really enjoyed your evening with us, Jen, and are inspired to look for and nurture our bees. Thank you for the inspiring talk and the delightful group activity at the end. Would someone tell my kids I’d like a 3D-printed bee habitat in my garden this year, please?

Some members brought along their glaze-fired ‘Exquisite Corpse’ group-painted pots from last month to show us how collaboration works!

Enjoy your Spring break folks. My son helped me to plant more low-growing plants to replace more of our chafer-infested lawn, so now I can enjoy more flowers and their bees. My next blog will include photos of some of the splendid pots we saw in Chilliwack last Saturday at Fraser Valley Potters juried show.

Gillian McMillan

Gillian writes blogs about ceramics in and around Vancouver and sometimes talks about other Art, her garden, travels and family.

This Post Has 2 Comments

  1. Kay Bonathan

    Thanks, Gillian. It’s great to have a detailed summary of all the information Jen presented to us at the TCP meeting.

  2. Linda Lebrun

    So sorry I had to miss this interesting presentation. Thank you for the re-cap Gill.
    Linda

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