Jeff Oestreich @ Akar

This Friday we will be showing Jeff Oestreich. Jeff is a full-time studio potter who followed his formal education at Bemidji State University and the University of Minnesota with an apprenticeship with Bernard Leach. His utilitarian pottery has strong visual ties to Art Deco Architecture. Soda fired with minimal use of colored glaze, Jeff’s work is thrown and altered, either by faceting, stretching, or cutting and rejoining. The main subject matter of his work is function and he is concerned with how his pottery will work in a domestic setting.
Accompanying Jeff we’ll be showing New Work by Susan Dewsnap and Jim Gottuso.
The show opens this Friday, January 27, at 9:30 AM CST in the Iowa City gallery and online at 10:00 AM CST.

AKAR. 257 E. Iowa Avenue. Iowa City. IA 52240. T: 3193511227. WWW.AKARDESIGN.COM

A sad sunday

News today of the loss of two of the community’s great artists. Thanks for all the inspiration.

RIP – Emmanuel Cooper



“Potter Emmanuel Cooper’s first solo show was in 1968 and since then he has continued to regularly exhibit his vessels which are characterised by an interest in marrying relatively classic forms to vibrantly coloured glazes and unusual textures. But he also has other interests: he was a founding editor with Eileen Lewenstein, and since 1996 has edited, the highly respected magazine Ceramic Review, he is Visiting Professor at the Royal College of Art and has been awarded an OBE for his services to the arts. However in spite of his writing and teaching activities, Cooper remains at heart a potter, saying, ‘The head, heart and hand literally and metaphorically come together when I’m creating.’”

Text via Ideas in the Making. Please follow the link for more images and text.

RIP – Raymond Finch


“Ray Finch, a South Londoner born in 1914, approached Michael Cardew in 1935, seeking employment. Cardew told him to go away and get some experience. He studied for a year at the Central School of Art, in London, and then was accepted by Cardew at Winchcombe Pottery. When Cardew went to Wenford Bridge in 1939 he left Finch in charge of Winchcombe. Production was interrupted by the war, but when it re-started in 1946 he purchased the business from Cardew. He ran Winchcombe until 1979 when he handed the running of the business over to his son, Michael.”For more info about Ray Finch please visit: http://www.studiopottery.com/cgi-bin/mp.cgi?item=164, http://rangefree.blogspot.com/2012/01/ray-finch-rip.html or this post on Dan Finnegan’s blog.

Common Ground: Ceramics in Southern California 1945-1975


A broad survey of more than fifty ceramic artists who worked in the Los Angeles Area in the decades following World War II, Common Ground, as a book and exhibition, celebrates the art that is central to the mission of the American Museum of Ceramic Art in Pomona, CA. The artists selected for Common Ground all had a direct connection to Millard Sheets, an artist, art educator, arts administrator, and designer, whose activities and ideology had an enormous impact on southern California in the middle of the twentieth century. The essays take different perspectives on the region’s dynamics, together presenting an in-depth analysis of the complex and diverse factors that created a fertile ground for ceramics. Elaine Levin introduces the major figures in ceramics from the 1920s through the postwar years and outlines Southern California’s ceramic history and aesthetics. Harold B. Nelson sketches a biographical portrait of Millard Sheets that shows the artist and administrator’s multifaceted roles. Christy Johnson recounts the story of a little-known potter, Marian Moule, that illuminates the broader experiences of the student and aspiring ceramist in the 1950s and 1960s. Jo Lauria describes new avenues to show and sell – craft competitions, interior design showrooms, and art fairs – and illustrates successful marketing tactics with case studies. Dr. Billie P. Sessions chronicles the evolution of college-level ceramic education and compiled an appendix of Southern California colleges, instructors and students. James F. Elliot-Bishop provides a chronology of Gladding, McBean, an early innovator of ceramic technology, that evolves through mergers into Interpace, a company that employs ceramicists to design dinnerware for commercial production and produce original tile murals. Dr. Cecile Whiting surveys the broader Los Angeles art scene, offering a balanced and scholarly analysis of the trends that persisted and the new artists who emerged by the 1970s. From the 1950s through the 1970s crafts, especially ceramics, came to represent the free spirit of self-expression and experimentation that characterized west coast living. Common Ground: Ceramics in Southern California 1945-1975 tells the stories of a generation of studio potters, who were often self-taught or trained in traditional apprenticeships but helped develop college curricula for ceramics. They advanced the technology of the wheel and the kiln, developed glazes and techniques. By establishing professional organizations, such as the American Craft Council, and publishing craft-themed magazines including Craft Horizons and Ceramics Monthly, their expertise and experimentation were shared. Through their efforts. galleries and museums eventually recognized ceramics as a valid art medium. New theories and aesthetic philosophies were debated: the European, Bauhaus-grounded function-and-form school versus the Zen-influenced, abstract-expressionist artists; those who advocated clay as an aft-form and those who sought to make a living by incorporating ceramic design in industry and architecture. Eventually all found a place and added to the distinct ethos of high and low art, nature and technology that defined southern California culture.To purchase a copy visit The American Museum of Ceramic Art website.