Watershed

I just got home from a 2 week residency at Watershed Center for the Ceramic Arts in Newcastle, Maine.  Once again, I was reminded of the importance of getting out of my own studio and seeing things with new eyes and being being surrounded by an excellent group artists who are thinking and talking about their work and pushing forward.

A view across the studio.

My plan before arriving was to work on some serving dish ideas based on the cross vault arch form. I soon realized that the focus of my time would be more about material than a specific form. We dug and mixed clay from a mound that had been delivered in the early 70’s to be made into bricks in the factory that is now Watershed’s studio building. The brick clay is very coarse with pebbles and not nearly as plastic as the commercially mixed clay that I’m accustomed to using. Stepping out of my comfort zone was obviously what I needed and learning how to  work with this clay and have its character come across in the finished piece became my challenge.

Recycled Kiln - built from pulverized and reformed soft brick.

One of my fantasies in going to Watershed was to fire earthenware in a soda kiln – using sodium vapor as the exterior glaze. This has been an interest for several years but I haven’t had the opportunity until now. Most of the group fired the kiln together and we were excited with the results. The red clay darkened to range from deep terra cottoa to dark brown and where a light terra sigillata had been applied, the surface remained light or flashed for a nice contrast with the dark clay. Below is a glimpse from the unloading. I’ll add more pictures when I have them.

Salad Days Invitational Sale

I have to start this post by exclaiming how awesome an event Salad Days is. I have never been there but I’m sure it is tremendous. It works like this:

Watershed Center for the Ceramic Arts gives a residency to a potter, Sean O’Connell in 2010,  who makes 500 beautiful earthenware salad plates. Once the plates are made, they host a salad bar full of local veggies and for a mere $30 donation you get to pick out one of Sean’s plates and feast on the bountiful buffet.

Other attractions include a raffle of pots that are donated from potters around the country that are fired in Watershed’s wood and soda kilns and an Invitational Pottery Sale. I will sending a group of work this week for the Invitational Sale and I sent a bisque fired triangular ewer for the raffle. I won’t be there to see it fired, so if you win it in the raffle, please send a photo or post one on my Facebook page.

I will be heading across Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine in August for 2 weeks at Watershed, but I’ll save the details for an upcoming post.

American Pottery Festival Poster

Once again a stack  American Pottery Festival posters arrived via US Mail. It is another nicely laid out design with 85 sweet pots. If you would like one for your home, studio, or classroom I’ll be happy to send one while my supply lasts. Email me and type Poster in the subject line.

This is the 20th anniversary of the Northern Clay Center and they have invited everyone who has ever participated in the Festival to send 10 – 20 pieces. The dates of the show and pottery extravaganza are September 9-12 this year in Minneapolis, MN.