artist profile: Jocelyn Reid

 
 

I just stumbled across the work of Jocelyn Reid on instagram and just had to share it with you all. Jocelyn is a fourth year ceramics major at ACAD.  Her Sandbox exhibition is up until the 15th so if you’re in the area please make the time to stop by and have a play.

Jocelyn writes; “Sandbox is an installation of ceramic sculptures that all feature
removable and interchangeable parts. Because of this, I am inviting all
viewers and spectators to interact, and essentially play with all of the
different works. By engaging this sense of touch and discovery, all
people have the option to transition to a very basic level of play while
in contact with the pieces in the Sandbox. In this way, each person can
become a kind of performer. The forms are inspired by references from
both manufactured and organic forms, and this parallel gives way to
other contradictory ideas – most prominently, adulthood vs. childhood,
and familiarity vs. foreignness. Most importantly, the Sandbox is a
place for exploration of the sculptures, and of each persons own self.”


ARTIST STATEMENT

In the ceramic sculptures I
create, I put organic matter and manufactured objects on equal footing
with one another. By mixing these two contradictory things, the line
between them is blurred. Everyday objects transform into something
foreign and living, just as the natural matter that I reference becomes
hard and substantial. By referencing these two components and mixing
them together, controlled becomes uncontrolled, and vice versa.

The
constant presence of manufactured objects in the natural world inspires
me and informs my sculptures. Nature has become the best and most
special of all fads – an excursion into the wilderness is never without a
sleek camera to document the experience. We keep plants in our houses
and offices, own cabins in the middle of secluded forests, and build
buildings in the image of bee hives and birds nests. The same thing that
inspires wonder and interaction in nature is akin to that which sends
people to line up for hours on end to buy the newest offering from
Apple. That thing is a feeling of seduction, discovery, and play. I
believe this mix of sentiments can be found in everyday life. We rarely
consider the things that we use daily until they’re taken out of our
routine. By melding these ordinary forms with unpredictable organic
ones, I create something familiar yet foreign that inspires a need to
touch and interact.

This tactile interaction with the piece
creates a completely different experience for the viewer, simply because
the work engages a sense other than sight – touch. By allowing the
audience this alternate form of connecting with the work, they can go
past the role of simply being an observer and become a performer.
Although my sculptures can be experienced through sight, they are not
complete and successful until the viewer makes the decision to reach out
and interact with the piece. The recognition of a part on a sculpture
is met with discovering another part that is new and alien – my
intention is that this feeling of exploration can apply to all ages and
types of people. This is how the audience can become performers. By
being seduced by the sculptures, and making the decision to touch them,
every person, no matter who they are, can transition to a very basic
level of play.
All of these intangible ideas find a home for
themselves in my sculptures. Adulthood mixes with childhood, familiar
meets foreign, and the traditional rules about keeping a safe distance
from a work of art become broken. The results are engrossing assemblages
of ceramic parts. Where on one side there is velvety-smooth porcelain,
the piece nesting on top of it has boisterous rubber coating running
down the side. Where one part is sided by creamy balloon-black flocking,
a spiky removable piece is slippery with gold spray paint. Where one
piece tugs on a memory of a familiar shiny bike chain, the idea is
interrupted by another shape that seems to be something vital and spongy
pulled off of the ocean floor.

Marion Nicoll GalleryAlberta College of Art + Design
1407-14th Avenue N.W.
Calgary Alberta
Phone | 403.283.7655
Web | marionnicollgallery.wordpress.com

Remnants @ Santa Fe Clay

Opening Reception: Friday, March 8th 
5:00- 7:00 pm 




March 8 – April 20, 2013

Peter
Christian Johnson and Todd Volz will share Santa Fe Clay’s gallery this
spring. Both employ the skills of an engineer or an inventor, as much
as those of a traditional artist. Their industrial architectural artwork
makes a complementary pairing. 
 
Peter
Christian Johnson’s work “is meant to straddle the present,
simultaneously looking back to the past and toward the future. It
catalogs the act of making, of constructing, of inventing, and
reinventing.” He begins his
work by drafting pieces in a 3-D computer modeling program. Complex
armatures and paper templates aid him in building his work. His pieces
are composites of thrown, press molded and slab-built sections. Peter
has a BS in Environmental Science from Wheaton College, and an MFA from
Pennsylvania State University. He has currently been awarded a long term
residency at the Archie Bray Foundation in Helena, MT. When not in MT,
he is an associate professor at Eastern Oregon University.

Todd
Volz seamlessly combines clay, wood, metal, fabric and found objects in
his imaginative sculptures. They are so convincing as a functional
machine that you look for the ON switch, and expect them to have moving
parts! His pieces are familiar to the viewer, like seeing an old
mechanical object, but elusive enough to engage your curiosity about how
they work. He also utilizes throwing, press molds and hand-built
processes in each sculpture. The clay surfaces get several sprayed coats
of terra sigillata, creating a metallic patina. Todd is currently the
Studio Manager at Santa Fe Clay. He has a BA in Art Education and Art
from the University of Wyoming, and an MFA from the University of Idaho.

 
Opening Reception: 
Friday, March 8
5:00 – 7:00 pm

 

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545 Camino de la Familia

   Santa Fe, NM 87501

  505-984-1122

Tisdale Figurative Invitational @ Red Lodge Clay Center

When I saw this I just about lost my mind and jumped in the car and drove straight there to see it. Then I remembered how far away I am and that we’re expecting a winter storm today….maybe another day. Thank goodness all the images are online.

Patti Warashina

Claire Curneen

Janis Mars Wunderlich

curatorial statement for Tisdale Figurative Invitational


James Tisdale is a Resident Artist and Ceramic Education Coordinator at the Austin Museum of Art. His position with AMOA has allowed him to participate in several residency programs in the US and across the globe, even teaching at the International Ceramic Studio in Kecskemet, Hungary. His allegorical, biographically inspired figures have been exhibited internationally and most recently his work was featured at SOFA Chicago. Red Lodge Clay Center is proud to welcome Tisdale back to Montana after twenty years. We are also excited to have the opportunity to collaborate with him on this exhibition. “Silhouettes” presents an intimate, yet diverse display of contemporary, figurative ceramic sculpture.

The figure has had a pretty interesting run throughout the history of art. More than once this icon has been declared “DEAD”, only to rise again thanks to the undeniable hubris of the human condition. We will always grapple with ourselves and so we will always have need to view ourselves through the varied, external, interpretive lens of the maker. Some of the artists in the exhibit honor the classical rendering of the figure to explore the human condition, while others abstract surface and form to exploit psychological underpinnings or to celebrate frozen moment narratives. Humor, history, mythology, and anthropomorphism inform these objects in a melange that is only possible in modernity. It’s easy to forget that the salon once vilified deviations from the representational figure. Now such deviations are not only accepted, they are the exemplar. Debates between protectors of tradition and those reaching for innovation are applicable to many fields and it is an opportunity to examine our own boundaries.

Humanity has primordial ties with the material of ceramics and a seemingly primordial impulse to recreate our likeness in the plastic mud. The figure serves as human proxy and as divine proxy. The figure functions as icon and catharsis. It is a way for us to try catching lightening in a bottle. The collective “we” can redefine ourselves through the figure. Through the figure we can be immortal. “

Artists in the show: Sunkoo Yuh, Kensuke Yamada, Janis Mars Wunderlich, Paige Wright, Patti Warashina, James Tisdale, Zachary Tate, Richard Swanson, Nan Smith, Esther Shimazu, Deborah Rogers, Gabriel Parque, Richard Nickel, Meg Murch, Melissa Mencini, Tammy Marinuzzi, Beth Lo, Clayton Keyes, Margaret Keelan, Magdalene Gluszek, Debra Fritts, Diana Farfan, Thaddeus Erdahl, Claire Curneen, Andrea Keys Connell, Tom Bartel, Wesley Anderegg, Pavel Amromin

Show runs until April 26th
Red Lodge, MT 59068 Ph. 406.446.3993
redlodgeclaycenter.com/lists.php?eid=181&type=exhibit