Thursday, February 12, 2015

Old work! Or any way, some of what got me rolling.











This body of work was called "Talking about people and things." I started this body of work as a means for expanding the form and surface of the pot--wheel thrown pots that is. My aim here was to transcend mere pottery and begin to build sculptures from wheel thrown parts, and to develop a glazing style that was dynamic, colorful, and controllable. While I look back on this body of work as ultimately successful, as a stepping stone, I came to understand the huge flaw in my approach. I was foolishly trying to deny that they were pots! The big step up this work gave me was this: the nature of a pot, as a cylindrical sort of form, is hugely dynamic in terms of presence, perspective, and viewership. So, they sure as shit are pots, and that is fine!

3 comments:

  1. These are great photos Tom. Can't wait to see what ceramics you get going on after you make some paintings! x

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  2. Fabulous :) Great combination of paintings and ceramics. Do you know Julian Schnabel? Your works are totally different than him. The only similarity that I can say is that he uses these combination in a different way.

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  3. Thank you for the comment! Oddly enough, I have been thinking about old Schnabel a good deal of late. I am super interested in his art! My kinship with Schnabel is not in terms of combining strange media. Rather, we use the diffused surface in a similar function. While his broken crockery create s a diffused surface in terms of the negative spaces created by the tactile function of his plate. I diffuse my surface by way of imposed black lines which sit on top of the surface. I will be posting about both combining media and about my black lines within the week. So hold onto your hat!

    Schnabel is a serious enigma of his time--too good for his own good, and too self aware for any good to come of any of that. Here is an article you might be interested in. http://observer.com/2013/03/the-resurrection-of-julian-schnabel-has-the-art-world-finally-forgiven-the-worlds-most-famous-painter/
    Also, check out his website. It has an almost complete record of his body of work.
    www.julianschnabel.com/

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