Ceramics

Ceramics

Open Studio Weekend Spotlight: Lisa Kurtz

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“I fell in love with the fluid and impressionable characteristics of this wonderful medium…” - Lisa Kurtz

“Sushi Serving Tray with Condiment Bowl and Spoon” by Lisa Kurtz, Stoneware, slab and pinched, 4.5x18x8in, 2017, SOLD

“Sushi Serving Tray with Condiment Bowl and Spoon” by Lisa Kurtz, Stoneware, slab and pinched, 4.5x18x8in, 2017, SOLD

Clay is the most malleable medium; you can stretch it, bend it, shape it, impose innumerable textures upon its surface so that it might look like anything else, yet it is also sturdy and durable. A teapot might last several lifetimes.

Lisa Kurtz’ “Sushi Serving Tray with Condiment Bowl and Spoon” has that strength and resiliency but bends with such fluidity that it might be mistaken for fabric. Kurtz explains how that commutation reaches back in her family history:

“Flower Basket” by Lisa Kurtz, Stoneware, thrown and coil, 8.5x5.5x4.75in, 2017, SOLD

“Flower Basket” by Lisa Kurtz, Stoneware, thrown and coil, 8.5x5.5x4.75in, 2017, SOLD

“My grandfather, Nick Guarneschelli, came over to the states to be an artist. He painted and did sculpture, eventually teaching at the Louisville School of Art. To support his growing family in Kentucky, he also worked as a tailor, as his family back home had been in the business for years. I have always loved the textures in fibers and material and I believe that stems from my Italian roots. I often use scraps of old fabric salvaged from my mother and grandmother’s houses to impress textures into the clay. When I do this I feel connected to generations of my family that came before me. My aunt is a prolific painter and I have many cousins that are also artists in different mediums. It seems artists breed artists. All three of my grown children are now working or studying in arts related fields.”

“As an artist and a maker of handmade objects, I always strive for the human connection between my work and the user of my pottery. The fact that people can use and enjoy my work in their everyday lives has been especially important to me as a potter. My work has evolved slowly over many years and I still enjoy fine-tuning those little details in my work that make it user friendly. I am most pleased if I make a handle on one of my pieces that beckons you to pick it up and then fits so comfortably in your hands that you want to use it every morning or at family meals or celebrations.”

Rocks and water have always inspired me. I am fascinated by the effect of water on the earth and the calming effect it has upon me. The textures and colors in water, sand, sea birds, shells, rocks, and marine creatures inform my work and my glazes. My goal is to infuse my work with the peaceful feelings that water worn rocks, landscape and waves give to me. 

“Seaside Urn” by Lisa Kurtz, Stoneware, coil and slab, 7x8.5x8.5in, 2017, SOLD

“Seaside Urn” by Lisa Kurtz, Stoneware, coil and slab, 7x8.5x8.5in, 2017, SOLD

Kurtz has led a rich life as a professional artist making functional clay pieces, and she has taught at Cleveland State Community College in Cleveland, Tennessee, and Pellissippi State Community College in Knoxville, Tennessee. Since she moved back to Louisville, she has been teaching Art History online for Pellissippi. “I also give clay workshops and teach wheel throwing classes to students at all different levels. Most recently (Spring and Summer of 2018) I taught wheel throwing and making reed handles for pottery workshops at the Appalachian Arts Craft Center in Norris, Tennessee.”

“I have been lucky to learn from great teachers. I feel it’s really important to carry on the clay traditions and that’s one reason I like to teach. It has been a big part of my life for the past several years. If I can impart just a little bit of the joy I get from clay to my students, it is all worth it!” 

I have always encouraged and welcomed the happy accidents that take place in the firing process. This is leading me to explore various methods of firing, including soda firing. I came to Louisville this summer to help build a new soda kiln at U of L. I am taking a post baccalaurette class there with Todd Burns to further my exploration of new work and soda firing. Emphasizing areas of shadow, shiny and matte surfaces is my goal. If I can accentuate textural qualities by the play of fire and vapor from the firing process, the work becomes more interesting to me visually and viscerally.  

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Kurtz has been an active member of several professional juried guilds, artist associations and boards, including the Kentucky Crafts Guild, the Foothills Craft Guild, The Kentucky Department of the Arts Marketing Program, The Knoxville Art Alliance, The New Prospect Craft Center, Tennessee Craft, The Knoxville Museum of Art and Terra Madre: Women in Clay. Her clay work has been exhibited and sold in galleries and shops across the U.S. and in national and regional juried fine art shows and craft fairs.

Lisa Kurtz will be participating in the 2018 Open Studio Weekend, sponsored by Louisville Visual Art and University of Louisville’s Hite Art Institute. Her studio, located in the Highlands neighborhood, will be open the weekend of November 3 and 4. Tickets for Open Studio Weekend will go on sale October 16. Click here for more information.

Website:    LisaKurtzHighlandPottery.weebly.com
LInkedIn:   linkedin.com/in/lisakurtzhighlandpottery
Instagram: @lisakurtzhighlandpottery

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"Mountain Tea Set", by Lisa Kurtz, Stoneware, thrown and altered, Teapot: 7x9.5x5.5in, Teabowl: 2.75x4x4in, SOLD

"Mountain Tea Set", by Lisa Kurtz, Stoneware, thrown and altered, Teapot: 7x9.5x5.5in, Teabowl: 2.75x4x4in, SOLD

"Jewelry Jars and Ring Holder", by LIsa Kurtz, Stoneware, thrown and pinched, Jars: 3.75x4x3.5in, SOLD, Ring Holder: 3.75x5.4in, SOLD

"Jewelry Jars and Ring Holder", by LIsa Kurtz, Stoneware, thrown and pinched, Jars: 3.75x4x3.5in, SOLD, Ring Holder: 3.75x5.4in, SOLD

"Moonstone Vase", by Lisa Kurtz, Stoneware, thrown and slab, 10x6.5x5.5in, 2017, $280

"Moonstone Vase", by Lisa Kurtz, Stoneware, thrown and slab, 10x6.5x5.5in, 2017, $280


Written by Keith Waits. Entire contents copyright © 2018 Louisville Visual Art. All rights reserved. In addition to his work at the LVA, Keith is also the Managing Editor of a website, Arts-Louisville.com, which covers local visual arts, theatre, and music in Louisville.

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Ceramics

Vignette: Gayle Cerlan

"Alice in Potterland" by Gayle Cerlan, Clay, glaze, 16.5x7x6.5in, 2018, $975

"Alice in Potterland" by Gayle Cerlan, Clay, glaze, 16.5x7x6.5in, 2018, $975

Gayle Cerlan is currently working on two different bodies of work for two different exhibits. Here we see work she will be showing in Louisville with Jacque Parsley in September 2018. 

Cerlan’s pieces are ceramic sculptures that capture an aesthetic from more than a century ago but also feel of a more recent time. “Alice in Potterland” is an obvious allusion to the Lewis Carroll classic, and could almost be an artifact from the late-Victorian period in England. Yet there is also a degree of American sensibility from 100 years later, a time when Carroll’s fantastical, hallucinatory imagery found purchase in the counter-culture. And what are we to make of the small skull tucked under the arm of this unique hare?

There is ample narrative in this body of work, and it seems likely that its full effect would be best experienced seeing them as a group, so that the characters are encountered in context and the viewer may find their own story. The bemused, slightly vacant gaze in the face of “Amelia” captures a surrealistic charm that causes us to ponder whether the flowers above her head are contained within the vase or are indeed growing directly from inside this baroque lady’s skull.

This work will be included in an exhibit at Craft(s) Gallery & Mercantile with Jacque Parsley entitled, Shared Vision. The show will run September 7 through 28 with an Artist Reception September 7, 6:00-9:00PM

"Amelia" by Gayle Cerlan, Clay, glaze, paint, found objects, 10x6x6.4,5in, 2018, $850

"Amelia" by Gayle Cerlan, Clay, glaze, paint, found objects, 10x6x6.4,5in, 2018, $850

Cerlan has been an active member of the Kentucky arts community through her involvement as the creator and director of the Cityworks exhibition (1997-1998), and as curator of the DinnerWorks exhibition (1994-1997). She has served on the boards of Louisville Visual Art and the Kentucky Museum of Art & Craft and has been an Adjunct Professor of Ceramics at Indiana University Southeast, Bellarmine College, and the University of Louisville. She founded Cerlan Gallery in Lexington, Kentucky (1997-2007) and established a fine arts school for all ages, ArtStudio (1997-2014). Cerlan has exhibited her ceramic art nationally and internationally and has won many awards and grants. Her work can be found in numerous public collections.

Hometown: Louisville and Lexington, Kentucky
Education: BFA Louisville School of Art; MA, University of Louisville; Completed coursework at Alfred University in New York. 
Gallery Representative: Kentucky Artisan Center, Gayle Cerlan Hunt Art Studio & Classes (Lexington, Kentucky)

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"Grey Evening Gloves" by Gayle Cerlan, Clay, glaze, paint, gold leaf, 10x8x6.5in, 2018, $950

"Grey Evening Gloves" by Gayle Cerlan, Clay, glaze, paint, gold leaf, 10x8x6.5in, 2018, $950

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"Birds of A Feather" by Gayle Cerlan, Clay, glaze, glass, gold leaf, 11x5x5in, 2018, $950

"Garden of Eden" by Gayle Cerlan, Clay, glaze, paint, gold leaf, 9.5x7x5in, 2018, $900

"Garden of Eden" by Gayle Cerlan, Clay, glaze, paint, gold leaf, 9.5x7x5in, 2018, $900


Written by Keith Waits. Entire contents copyright © 2018 Louisville Visual Art. All rights reserved.

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Ceramics

Vignette: Lindsey Dezman

"Grenadier 5" by Lindsey Dezman, Ceramic, 16x16in, 2017

"Grenadier 5" by Lindsey Dezman, Ceramic, 16x16in, 2017

Artists are known for repurposing materials, but Lindsey Dezman’s most recent approach is a little more unusual. She captures the detritus from a communal studio sink trap, a plumbing fixture that collects discarded clay and glaze particles that would otherwise clog sewer lines. Although a new technique for her studio practice, it is consistent with the anthropological thread that seems to run through Dezman’s career.

“I explore materials and objects as a means to understand rhythms of time. As we age, so do the things around us; the steps upon our front door creak and slump more with every season, while a fossilized, thousand years old dinosaur bone is a test of time. My work is inspired from these rhythms and pulses of life. The results are simple, abstracted forms through which material explorations take place. I specifically choose to highlight the inherent life spans and the nuances within each of the materials that I use.”

“As my methods of making vary, my focus is always upon utilizing clay in alternative ways. "Grenadier" is a collection of wall works that highlight a continued self-interest in material research, recording, and beauty in the discarded. The sludge is ever changing from red, white, beige to blue depending upon the materials used by myself, and others in the studio. I collect this accumulated sludge of clay and glaze and build the work using the Japanese process of Nerikomi. It incorporates a layering and stacking technique that, once cut into sections, reveals a decorative pattern. The wall pieces illustrate the transitional shifts between material usage over time while the sculptural works are core samples. By harvesting materials from the sink trap, the results are spontaneous and the pattern is unpredictable. The work becomes indicative of the materials washed away and becomes a record mapping the activities within a communal studio.”

Even though Dezman’s past work does include examples of what could described as more conventional forms and vessels, she seems far more conceptual than a potter. Her perspective feels fluid, shifting between an absorption in the craft and an objective point-of-view of her position in the world as both an artist and a human being.

"Grenadier 7" by Lindsey Dezman, Ceramic, 16x16in, 2017

"Grenadier 7" by Lindsey Dezman, Ceramic, 16x16in, 2017

Dezman splits her time between New Albany, IN and Detroit, MI. Earlier this year she was featured in Small Favors: Think Inside the Box, The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, PA, and from July 26 through August 22 you can find her work in Small Works 2018 at the Trestle Gallery, Brooklyn, NY. Her work is part of permanent collections including Cranbrook Art Museum and Icheon World Ceramic Center. Dezman is currently the Resident Artist at Indiana University Southeast in Southern Indiana.  

Hometown: New Albany, Indiana
Education: Master of Fine Arts, Cranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield Hills, MI, 2014; Post Baccalaureate, Oregon College of Art & Craft, Portland, OR, 2012; Bachelor of Fine Arts, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, 2011
Website: www.lindseydezman.com
Instagram: lindseydezman

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An exhibition at ROYGBIV Gallery in Columbus, OH, July 2017  Installation View

An exhibition at ROYGBIV Gallery in Columbus, OH, July 2017  Installation View

"Grenadier 8" by Lindsey Dezman, Ceramic, 16x16in, 2017

"Grenadier 8" by Lindsey Dezman, Ceramic, 16x16in, 2017

"Miniature.25" by Lindsey Dezman, Ceramic, 3.5x1.5x22in, 2018

"Miniature.25" by Lindsey Dezman, Ceramic, 3.5x1.5x22in, 2018

"Grenadier 4" by Lindsey Dezman, Ceramic, 16x16in, 2017

"Grenadier 4" by Lindsey Dezman, Ceramic, 16x16in, 2017


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Written by Keith Waits. Entire contents copyright © 2018 Louisville Visual Art. All rights reserved.

 

Ceramics

Student Spotlight: Abigail Munger

"Pregnant Woman 2" by Abigail Munger, Ceramic, 3x6in, 2017

"Pregnant Woman 2" by Abigail Munger, Ceramic, 3x6in, 2017

In her sculpture “So fake you want to eat them” Abigail Munger shows meticulous craft in carving foam into convincing replicas of sushi, so when we are presented with the primitive forms of “Pregnant Woman 2”, we must consider the artist’s choice to work in such a rough, unfinished manner. The figure clearly references ancient sculptures such as “The Venus of Willendorf”, with the full rounded shapes of the historical fertility symbol and carved in geometric patterns. 

Munger states that her goal is to show the complexity of darkness and fear. “Darkness and Death is not always meant to be ugly or scared. Sometimes the darkness can be what shines a light at the end of the tunnel. My solo senior show is focused on that Beauty found in Darkness.” 

"So fake you want to eat them" by Abigail Munger, Carved foam, 7x8in, 2016

"So fake you want to eat them" by Abigail Munger, Carved foam, 7x8in, 2016

Munger has also exhibited two-dimensional works in conjunction with the annual Evening With Poe theatrical production at the Frazier History Museum. The stark and simple graphic images point to the artist’s interest in more macabre subjects.

“Overall my goal is to tap into a world that not many people focus on. Rather that darkness comes from the "freaks" hidden under a circus tent, or the dead body under the floor boards that you still hear the beating heart of.” 

Munger exhibited, "Pregnant Woman 2" in the Carey Ellis Art Show at the University of Kentucky. The piece was recognized with a Theophilia Joan Oexmann Award under the category of Ceramic. 

Hometown: Louisville, Kentucky
Education: BA, Brescia University, Kentucky, 2018
Website: Abigailmunger.wixsite.com
 

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"Woman in Relief" by Abigail Munger, Fired clay, 5x9in, 2017

"Woman in Relief" by Abigail Munger, Fired clay, 5x9in, 2017

"Painted Paper Flower" by Abigail Munger, Acrylic painted paper, 13in, 2015

"Painted Paper Flower" by Abigail Munger, Acrylic painted paper, 13in, 2015

"Quoth the Heart... Nevermore" by Abigail Munger, Acrylic print, 11x14in, 2017

"Quoth the Heart... Nevermore" by Abigail Munger, Acrylic print, 11x14in, 2017


Written by Keith Waits. Entire contents copyright © 2018 Louisville Visual Art. All rights reserved.

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Ceramics

Vignette: Steven Cheek

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"How are we as a society going to leave our mark on the world?" - Steven Cheek

"Killing Fields Bourbon Bottle Set" by Steven Cheek, Porcelain, 10x5x5in, 2016, POR

"Killing Fields Bourbon Bottle Set" by Steven Cheek, Porcelain, 10x5x5in, 2016, POR

The allure of ceramics is so often in the holding of well-crafted functional objects; to wrap your hand around a favorite mug, warmed to the touch by the hot liquid contained within. The form and textures of hand made pottery are a visceral, sensual pleasure.

In his work, Steven Cheek anticipates that aspect of the work by populating his exquisite surfaces with unexpected motifs that express unsettling themes.

“My work is designed to challenge the viewer’s ideals and thoughts about what is beautiful,” Cheek explains in his Artist’s Statement, “and to encourage the viewer to contemplate issues that are taking place all around us, but which are often uncomfortable to discuss.”

“I strive to engage the viewer by juxtaposing beauty with the ugliness of the world in which we live. It is my intent to marry the beautiful classical vessel with imagery that subtly confronts the viewer to think about a deeper issue.  These issues include war, the impermanence of life, environmental destruction and man’s inhumanity to man and our response to these things.” 

“It is my goal to raise several questions; how do we mark or mourn the passing of lost ideals?  How are we as a society going to leave our mark on the world? Are we going to leave the world a better place? Will we learn from the mistakes of those that came before us?” 

"Car Bombing" by Steven Cheek, Porcelain, 4x3x3in, 2015, POR

"Car Bombing" by Steven Cheek, Porcelain, 4x3x3in, 2015, POR

Cheek has taught at the University of Louisville, Bellarmine University, Indiana University Southeast, and the University of Tennessee Chattanooga.

Cheek will be participating in first Southern Crossings Pottery Festival (SXPF), which he is coordinating with Amy Chase and Jason Bige Burnett. SXPF will take place March 2 & 3, 2018 at Copper & Kings in the Butchertown neighborhood of Louisvile. The event will showcase potters in the Ohio River Region, including Lexington, Cincinnati, and more. The festival will also include the Empty Bowls Benefit Dinner @PLAY Louisville on March 3, 2018.

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Hometown: Born Hillsboro, OR
Education: BFA in Ceramics from the University of Evansville and an MFA in Ceramics from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania
Website: www.stevengcheek.com
Instagram:

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"Oak Leaf Bottle" by Steven Cheek, Porcelain, 8x6x6in, 2016, POR

"Oak Leaf Bottle" by Steven Cheek, Porcelain, 8x6x6in, 2016, POR

"Whats In Your Water?" by Steven Cheek, Porcelain, 14x8x8in, 2006, POR

"Whats In Your Water?" by Steven Cheek, Porcelain, 14x8x8in, 2006, POR

"Killing Fields Mug" by Steven Cheek, Porcelain, 4.5x3.5x4in, 2017, POR

"Killing Fields Mug" by Steven Cheek, Porcelain, 4.5x3.5x4in, 2017, POR


Written by Keith Waits. Entire contents copyright © 2017 Louisville Visual Art. All rights reserved.

Are you interested in being on Artebella? Click here to learn more.