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Sunday, November 10, 2013
Tech snafu
Monday, February 25, 2013
Neat/Whiskey Vessel exhibition catalog on-line.
"Neat": The Art of the Whiskey Vessel"
Lillstreet Gallery really did an awesome job with all parts of this show, from publicity to promotional materials, to catalog and opening events. I am really exited to have been a part of this show. The catalog is available in print by contacting the gallery here: Lillstreet Gallery
Monday, February 4, 2013
New website up and running
Www.jeremyrandallceramics.com
Just wanted to spread the word and let you all know that my new website is posted, live and updated with new images and info. New for 2013 is the development of a shopping cart on the site which will soon feature a number of available pieces, one of a kind pottery as well as a few new lines that I have been working on that are a little more production minded. Please stay tuned and give me your feedback...most will be listened too. I'll keep you informed on the site as well as here about upcoming events, but the two sites are linked so posts that I make here will also post there. Ahhhh technology, a wonderful thing. I hope that 2013 proves to be a successful, productive, and creative year for you all. Cheers, and be sure to stop back often to see what's going on.
Visit www.jeremyrandallceramics.com to see the site. All image info will be added soon, and a few tweaks need to still be made, all in due time. Thanks to everyone for stopping.
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Jeremy Randall ceramics is now on Facebook!
Jeremy Randall Ceramics is now on Facebook! Stop by to check things out and see what's new, and please let me know what you think. I would love to see pots that you've taken into your lives, and to hear your thoughts and experiences. Happy New Year!!
Www.facebook.com/jeremyrandallceramics
"Neat. Art of the whiskey vessel at Lil Street gallery in Chicago opens February!
For anyone out there in the Chicago area, "Neat" opens in a couple of weeks with a reception on February 1st. The opening will host what sounds like an awesome Whiskey tasting, so belly up and check it out. I'll post images when the show is up so stay tuned.........
Info about the show and curator Doug Jepson can be found at the Lillstreet Website here:
Lillstreet Gallery
Cheers!
Jeremy
Friday, November 23, 2012
"Don't Box Me In" group show opens December 1st
Signature Contemporary Craft in Atlanta will be showing "Don't Box Me In" opening December. I can't wait to see all of the work as everyone included makes such stellar work. If you're in the Atlanta area during December be sure to check it out!
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Shows Section Updated
This platter is in the Harvest show at Gandee Gallery in Fabius NY. These are about 22" across. I've been loving them.
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Form and Landscape show at Imagine.
I have a show currently up for the month of June at my wife's gallery, Imagine, of new pots and a grouping of small drawings/paintings of local landscapes that I had recently completed. This idea had been floating around in my head for some time, and seemed to fit into her show schedule. landscape has been present on my mind alot lately, both in my work and in my immediate environment, and I like the pairing of the two together both in concept and aesthetic. The idea is still in its infancy, but has plenty of room to develop to better fit the idea and vision going on in my head. Time will tell....
The paintings are all 10x10" and are acrylic, ink and encaustic on panel. Stop by if you're in the area, the show I'll be up until June 30th at Imagine, 38 East Genesee Street, Skaneateles New York.
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Paradise City Arts Festival, Memorial Day
So it is now a week after the show but Paradise City was a success. Being someone who has just started doing a few large retail handcraft shows, I never really know what to expect and I feel like I'm usually rolling the dice. But I was pleasantly surprised with the outcome, handed out a ton of cards and sold a bunch of pots. Having the first hand contact with people who are interested in taking home your work is great. Good research, good feedback, and some nice momentum to return to the studio to make more. Next on the list is getting a couple of boxes to Red Lodge Clay Center an then get work to the Society Of Arts And Crafts for a featured artist window display at their location on Newberry Road in Boston.
This was one of a number of small, medium and large whiskey flasks made for the show. I'm going to be making a bunch more of these in the next few days.
And the icing on the cake was my 1950 "Zero" brand fan, donated by our good friends to keep me and booth-goers cool. The weekend was super hot, and although the show was indoor, the arena was still open to outside air flow and I didn't come with a fan. This little gem was in our friend's barn, and I don't know how many people commented on how perfectly it fit the booth, and one woman even wanted to buy it. I don't know if I should take that as insult or compliment, although she left the booth without and pots...
Kiln coming down!
So we have been in the middle of a house and studio move for the past month or so, which I wouldn't recommend to those who have a number of deadlines in the studio, but the lure of land and family has pulled us to the country.
The studio is still operational, but the soda kiln needed to be relocated. I wasn't too sure how successful the disassembly was going to be as we have been spraying six pounds of soda per firing for the past five years or so, but the majority of the brick came free with no problem.
It's hard to remember after six years how many brick it took to build a kiln, but having to move it again is a full reminder. I think I'm still recovering. Satisfying to do, but man I'm paying for it.
Someone is going to have a sweet BBQ patio for sure, with direct line right to the natural gas. As I get through a redesign of the kiln and get to building I'll post more pictures of the progress. Having so much room, and the ability to build to suit, I am pumped to be able to work in a number of sustainable attributes to make the studio a lot less impactive. More to come soon.
Friday, February 24, 2012
New instructional DVD now available and other news.
I got to watch a preview copy the other night and they did a ton of work and it looks really great. It was a bit weird to sit and watch myself make my pots, and you always sound weird on film, but all in all I think that it will be a good resource to people and studios.
Things have been really cruising lately an the next couple of months are jam packed with upcoming events. This Sunday Sarah and I have been invited to do a workshop for the Syracuse Ceramics Guild in Syracuse NY.
I am going to be doing Craftboston again this year and I have been gearing up for that. Last year was successful, and I hope to have learned a bit about the market in Boston and have been busily making work to take. There should be some nice new pots coming out of the kiln in the next couple of weeks so stay tuned. The dates for the show are March 23, 24, and 25 and it will be located at the Seaport Convention Center in Boston.
In April I am scheduled to go up and do a workshop for the ceramics department at St. Lawrence University where Shawn Oconnor is teaching a couple of classes.
I'll put up some pictures as soon as some come through. Later!
Monday, February 20, 2012
Saturday, January 14, 2012
A couple of new surface details
I have really been enjoying some of the new surfaces that have been coming out of the kiln lately. It's interesting that when I really try to pick apart every part of my glazing process and test, I end up with 90% ho-hum results. Then I go and put together a glaze that I haven't used in a while and a slip that I have been using alot of, add a little soda ash and some new things come out. I suppose that while using an easy bake oven, I have to take my surprises when I can get them. Here's a couple of details.
Cheers, here's to finding some time to post. More to come......as usual.
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Work at Charlie Cummings Gallery for "Cup: The Intimate Object VII"
Thanks to Charlie Cummings for the great photos. My hopes to a great show.
Friday, September 9, 2011
I love this time of year.
This time of the year is awesome. My morning commute felt like I was in another world, with thick fog and low light. It feels as though the air is changing and light is following. I love the light of fall in it's warmth and depth. There was just a group show that opened at the Cazenovia College art gallery that dealt with the idea of dwelling. Sanders Watson's paintings that are in the show made me think of this type of light and a very particular time of day.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Columbus/DVD filming fun
Well, it's done. The DVD is a rap and tomorrow I head back to New York. This has been a great time and I met some great people and got to know a pretty great place while I was at it. The last time I was in Columbus Ohio was for the 1999 NCECA here and it left a good impression on me. I'm not sure if it was because I was in college and getting to know what happens at NCECA, but I would like to think that it was the combo of that and the fact that it was a pretty great town.
This trip firmed up the fact that I do really like Columbus. The DVD filming was great and it was really interesting to go through the process. It is super strange to talk to a camera instead of a person, but that slowly dissolved over the last two days. The Ceramics Monthly folks are awesome, as are the American Ceramics Society folks and it was great getting to know them over a few beers. This was the studio where we shot, and it was a really nice community studio/gallery and seemed like it had some really great things going on.
The other thing that I discovered thanks to Jen Harnetty, is Jeni's Splendid ice Cream. this is unbelievable ice cream. We went last night to get a cone and I was blown away. I took a walk this evening after supper and wouldn't you know it but I ended up back there...and along with the small cone I got I also got a shirt. I will wear it with pride. Highly recommended with a trip to columbus.
Be on the lookout for the release date for the DVD as it should be out by NCECA Seattle next year. I'll post more about the filming later when it has a chance to sink in.
This was Jenni's ice cream with the line out the door. I guess others in Columbus know it's good too.
Saturday, August 20, 2011
South Carolina nostalgic
Morning cup of coffee
These are the mornings that I love. The semester is barreling down, and the pressures of getting things ordered, meetings getting scheduled and upcoming registration, new schedules, new syllabi etc are all crowding my mind, but then there are the things that remind you that the moment itself is awesome.
I am a firm believer that the handmade cup can save the world, and this morning was no different. Today's choice is a great Victoria Christien mug which is one of my recent favorites. But while I sat at the table, with the sounds of the kids coloring in the other room, I was reminded why I love where I live. At this point in the year you get a slight hint of the changing of the seasonal weather patterns. It's colder at night and the new crop of foods beginning to be harvested. The beauty of fresh local peaches and the first picked Paula red apples is a great example. Summer and fall are intermingling, and they are sitting on my dining room table smiling at me.
The kiln is being fired now, getting prepped and ready for the journey Monday to Ohio to begin production on the DVD. New work in the kiln is exiting and it has been nice to be able work on some new shapes recently and I like the things that are happening in the studio lately. Things will be out and assembled tomorrow, and I'll try to post some images before heading to Columbus. The coolness if the night was evident in the fog across the road from the house and studio, and the morning sun lit everything up is a great way. The perfect start to the day, all starting as usual with a good cup of coffee.
Friday, August 12, 2011
Filming for American Ceramic Society
I am going to try this blog updating thing a bit more regularly, although I do keep saying that, and hopefully I will be a bit better at sharing some thoughts, updates and developments with everyone out there. The studio and life have been busy, and I have been currently getting ready for the upcoming filming of an instructional DVD that will be filmed by the Ceramics Monthly/American Ceramics Society about my process and techniques. I filmed the short version during a workshop at Funke Fired Arts in Cincinnati back in march, check it out here, and was asked afterward to do one that was full length and much deeper in content and process. It so far has been an interesting yet different experience from some of the regular studio processes. In preparation for it I been building the work in triplicate so that I can get things to various stages of completion and then will build them again for the film. I am the type of maker that never seems to make the "same" work multiple times. I have pots that I make consistently, but I am constantly tweaking shapes or playing with proportions, forms and volumes and color are always evolving. I have also been working with some templates recently to assist is some more geometric or calculated shapes so for this process I has been a good tool for multiples.
I find that it is good process to work in series, I can see the smaller nuances in the forms that I am working on. New forms come from this and the process evolves repeatedly and some really informative things emerge. This process has been the opposite. I have been particular about size and dimension, height, volume and measurement and I am trying to make things so that I can do the Julia Childs from cake batter to cake in no wait time, and it will seem to the viewer that I am working on one piece start to finish, being fast tracked to keep it condensed and interesting.
I am pretty excited by this new shape that I am working on. I have always been interested in implements and other non-ceramic utilitarian objects and references have always shown up in the work. Bu this pot is a little bi more literal. I found draftsman's plans for tin forming and there were some diagrams for flared tin pans. I have been wanting to make some bucket forms for a while, and this bucket is a variation on that tin pan shape. It will get a bail type handle and a ceramic handle grip. I'm sure I will develop over the next little while, but it will make it's debut in the video. Until next time, cheers.






