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Yesterday I got a call from Suzen of the Village Gallery, where I have ceramics on display and for sale. Someone from New Jersey wanted to buy one of my vases, and wanted it shipped to New Jersey. The vase had a $15.00 price tag. What, Suzen asked, did I want to charge for shipping?

This was a first for me at this gallery, and one of only two times in my years of stuffmaking that the issue of shipping had come up. “It’ll be another $15.00,” I said in three seconds or so, feeling a) like I’d just lost a sale; b) trepidant that the customer would go for it, and the shipping would be more; c) super-stoked that someone wanted it enough to pay more to have it shipped. Suzen said she’d call me back, and in just a couple of minutes, she did: Sold!

So my mission is to get this puppy safely to Medford, New Jersey, and contain shipping and handling costs. Even if it’s more than $15 to ship, I will feel victorious, and grateful to New Jersey, not only for Bruce Springsteen and Kevin Smith, but for the fellow in Medford who made my day.

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This is part of the chess-piece-based series done in the early 2000s. The surface is a faux finish obtained at Ace Hardware. The original was a fountain, including a birdbathy bowl with the same surface treatment, and a small pump, also obtained at Ace. The bowl started to get mineral-deposit funky, and the fountain effect (out of the top of the head) didn’t really add to the piece, so the bowl and the pump were ditched. Amazing, the similarity in facial features to Denise’s, though this was done years and years before we met.

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A few years after the chess series came the tower series. This skyscraperish tower seemed incomplete. I was doing birds at the same time, so I made one to append, with a fond tip of the hat to the classic 30s film KING KONG. The title is “Kingfisher Kong” though the avianesque wallhanger bears little resemblance to any of the Kingfisher clan. If I ever do a remake, the species resemblance will be more true to life.

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Here’s a close-up of “Pterence Dactyl,” making his second appearance in these blog posts.

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Here’s some miscellany standing guard in the garage. A couple of things using the plaster cast of my life mask; some functional pottery; a Status of Liberty and an Eiffel Tower from Jan Peterson’s “Draw from the Hat” qucik-sculpt assignments; another from the Tower series, and two survivors of the “Some Assembly Required” series, wherein I made vases, sliced them up with a fettling knife, and slipped and scored and reassembled them in non-functional arrays.

Fettling knife–slipping and scoring–roulettes, batts, banding wheels, double-bellied, slab roller, extruder, pug mill–I love the language of Ceramics!

 

In the house that Denise bought, there is an adjunct to the garage that is badly infested by Black Widow spiders. Soon we will call the Bugman, but by way of prep I divested the space of my boxes-o-stuff. In the process I liberated one of my sculpted birds and set it in the front yard, beside the gorgeous and enormous agave, facing two of its fellows previously placed:

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“Horned Bird,” the one on the left, is the newest addition to this quasi-diorama. The two other birds are unnamed. The globular vase was made by my Phoenix College fellow ceramics-studio rat Richard R. Richard’s monogram is perfect: he is a former railroad man.

I also attempted my first bisque fire with the kiln I bought several moons ago. I set both dials to High and let it toast for four hours, which is probably not enough, but next time I’ll try five, and if that doesn’t work, next time, six. I have 04 pyrometric cones but I don’t have 05s or 06s, so I’ll trial-and-error it till I get more cones or a thermometer. But it cast a lovely light just before I shut it off, as evidenced by the view through the peephole:

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There are four pieces of ware in there. Can’t wait to pop the top and see how they did!

One of the largest collections of my ceramic works is within these walls. I am a houseguest here for another fourteen hours or so. My host acquired my works through purchase at various art shows and art sales, but mostly through my gifting of them. She has given them a good home.

Here are a few of them:

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Properly cared for, ceramic creations can last thousands of years. It gives me a peculiar comfort to know that some things of mine are receiving proper care.

It’s been a wonderful day, and now it’s time for bed: the 30th became the 31st. Good night, Night Owls!

 

ImageSome months ago my friend and fellow poet Debby Mitchell commissioned a coffee cup from me, to be given to her wonderful husband Gary in celebration of their birthday. I accepted the commission but missed the birthday deadline; Gary did get a photo of his cup, which was then at the greenware stage:

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A new deadline was set: August the 14th, their wedding anniversary. Last night I regretfully told Debby I would probably miss that deadline, too. Gary did get an updated photo of his cup, still in the greenware stage but personalized with his first name in blue mason stain:

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Why the missed deadlines? Here, with Debby’s gracious permission, is the substance of my Facebook message to her, by way of explanation:

*****

Debby, here is a story with seven sides:

In the mid-70s I took my first Ceramics class. The instructor was the excellent Maurice Grossman. He was supportive and encouraging to all his students, including me, but I had no talent, and the C he gave me was charitable. I never raised a cylinder during his class, though if I’d tried 500 times, I would have. My handbuilt work was mostly shoddy.

In spring of 1989 my then-wife and I took a ceramics class via Rio Solado Community College. It was held at North High School and taught by Calvin Tenney. After around 500 attempts, most failed, I started to get good at wheel-throwing, and I bought a potter’s wheel before the end of the year; and over the next twenty years I took junior college classes off and on, taking advantage of the kilns, equipment and glazes to get my money’s worth. But always in the back of my mind I hoped to wean myself from this arrangement and become independently ceramified.

One day during this time my then father-in-law presented me with a small octagonal kiln he’d found in a yard sale. I took the kiln to Marjon’s Ceramics, the main source of all things clay in the Valley of the Sun, and they repaired the “kill switch” and I did some firings. I liked the process, but the kiln had its issues and one of the misfirings that completely destroyed the ware the kiln contained compelled me to discontinue its use and to go back to Phoenix College classes.

When I moved to the Verde Valley I got involved with the Sedona Arts Center and took a ceramics class there. It was too expensive, though: for example, the Center required that students use their clay; and they were buying the clay from Marjon’s for about ten dollars a twenty-five-pound bag and selling it to the students for $28. So I looked for a place I could fire my clay without going to classes, and I thought I’d found one with one of my fellow artists at the Village Gallery, who said I could use her kiln for $35 per kiln load. But then I enrolled in a ceramics class at Yavapai Community College; that was this spring. They only charged students $10 a bag for clay. It was there that I fired the mug I made for Bill Campana. Not long after that, but after the last firing day at Yavapai, I accepted the commission for Gary’s cup.

Meanwhile, I got full-time work at Sedona Winds Independent Living Retirement Community, and my shift was 11pm to 7am, five nights a week. I found that having to go to class, go home, change, and soon after, go to work, was too onerous; consequently, I didn’t sign up for summer or spring class. But I needed to get Gary’s cup fired. Thus it was about two weeks ago I called my fellow artist at the Village Gallery. She said she did not want to fire other peoples’ ware any more; she’d had too many bad experiences. So I did what I’d wanted to do for many years: I found a used kiln online and bought it. Unfortunately the man who sold it to me had not been using it for ceramics (He heated horseshoes with it, and his wife melted glass in it.) And, let the buyer beware: it was far older than the ten years he’d implied it was: the ID plate Paragon Industries put on it had “Dallas 7, Texas” for the city/zone/state. You may recall that “zones” haven’t been in use since the advent of zip codes, which I’ve just Wikied and found that zip codes have been mandatory since 1967 for second- and third-class mail, so it’s pretty safe to say that this kiln I bought is at least 48 years old.

Yesterday morning I went to Marjon’s and showed their kiln guru Dean a photo of my kiln, asking him to fix me up with whatever it would take to make it operational. He sold me kiln shelves, supporting posts, pyrometric cones and glazes to get me what I needed to fire Gary’s cup. He also recommended an analog-display thermometer, but my budget was already just about spent.

I said this is a story with seven sides. That refers not to the seven paragraphs that comprise it, but to the fact that the kiln I now own is not the (nowadays) standard octagon shape, but septagonal, like sheriff’s badges and little else, including modern standard kiln “furniture.” I tell you this story because I feel bad that Gary’s cup is taking so long, and I want you and Gary to know that I don’t take my commitments lightly, and it breaks my heart when I break (or maybe, in this case, bend) such a commitment as the August 14 deadline I’d given myself for presentation of Gary’s cup to you two. You have been wonderful about that, and you deserve an explanation. Thanks for your attention!

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I should also mention that another step to getting the kiln operational was to get an outlet to match its four-pronged plug. The outlet was installed by Greg Huntington, my girlfriend Denise’s brother, licensed contractor and prince of a fellow, who accepted an inexpensive breakfast at a local restaurant as full and final payment for this task. If you need a remodel, a floor installation, or a home built from scratch, Greg is your man.

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The Celadon family of ceramic glazes is often ideal for a vessel with carving on it. The glaze is intensified in the incised area.

I played with the idea of illustrating this with an animation cel, a scene from Much Ado About Nothing, and a portrait of Nia Vardalos, but that would have been both distracting and (in the worst sense of the word) precious.

Here are the words:

Clay & glaze can
CRAZE a clay man

Effervesced Chi
Ends old ennui

Lepidoptera
Lulling Opera

 

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Faithful readers will recall “Li’l Universe,” a clay sculpture I offered for delectation about a half dozen posts ago. The faithfullest reader of all, Monsieur Michel Lamontagne of Canada, whimsically and delightfully created an image of an alien creature “misusing” Li’l Universe at a bowling alley. So this post is dedicated to him.

The big sister of Li’l Universe is much closer to bowling-ball size than her kid sibling, though still marginally shy of regulation size. In the photo above I’ve included one of my “business” cards, measuring 2 inches by 3-1/2 inches (approximately 50mm x 75mm if memory serves, Michel), to show scale. I also took a couple of webcam selfies, thus:

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So, friend Michel, there you have it. May your Byworld sojourns lead you to ever more fulfilling creative endeavor!

P1010184This little piggie is glazed with Coleman Red-Orange.

P1010181This little piggie stays home: I’m not going to display it for sale at the Village Gallery, where my stuff hangs out. It’s got Cobalt Turquoise and White Liner going for it, and I can’t wait to put some Cottonwood flowers in it after Denise and I move there.

P1010185This little piggie went wrong, or not: Coleman Red-Orange again, and Cobalt Turquoise, but the Red-Orange morphed to a sort of red iron oxide just below the rim. But the ribbing was consequently better defined with that thinness. Still, I wish I’d kept the vessel inverted/immersed longer in the glaze.

Bowers_G_Black Satinbird_3D_ceramic_12X6x9_1This little piggie DID go to market; after being rejected by the Yavapai College Juried Art Show, I gave it shelf space at the Village Gallery, and a $35.00 price tag. Within 24 hours it was purchased by the spouse of one of my fellow artists–and there was a thank-you note in the cash envelope! Moral: Rejection need not be Forever.

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And this little piggie is going Wee Wee Wee all the way to the Valley of the Sun. It was commissioned by, and made especially for, stellar Valley poet Bill Campana. I’ve upended it to reveal the signature/date format I use. Feb 6 on top, 2013 on bottom, and my signature in the middle, with the O of Bowers coinciding with the center. Atypically, since this is a commissioned work, I’ve added “Made exclusively” (below Feb 6) and “for bill campana” (above 2013. Bill texts almost entirely in lowercase, including his name) to the foot inscription. (The bottom of a functional ceramic vessel is called the Foot. Other body parts, like Lip and Belly, come into play as well when a vessel is described.)

It has been too long since my “One with Clay” featured clay. Feels good!