Jyorei Activities

Logan Wannamaker

Sunday August 22nd, 2010

3 to 5pm

This event is free to the public

 

Logan Wannamaker’s pottery will be on display at the Shumei Gallery in Crestone for the month of August. Logan, who lives and works in Taos, New Mexico will be speaking on his work, inspirations and firing techniques on Sunday August 22nd starting at 3pm. A reception will follow.

 

 

Logan is the director of Taos Clay, a community studio offering classes, workshops and residencies. His gallery showcases wood-fired, charcoal, salt, soda and saggar fired ceramics. His work is both functional and decorative and embodies the colors of the Southwest using regional materials. He produces functional dishes ranging from mugs, cups, bowl, plates and vases to wall hangings, sculpture, and ikebana. Logan Wannamaker is represented in many Taos and national collections and his work is sold exclusively out of his gallery in Northern New Mexico.

AN EXPLANATION OF MY WORK

Each of my pieces has been salt, wood or saggar fired. The sheen on the pot is not always developed by glaze, but by the salts reaction to the clay body, the development of wood ash, and by the compression of an exterior slip (burnishing). I work with slips and atmospheric kilns in order to create a flashing effect, conducive to the New Mexico landscape, rich in reds, oranges, and subtle pinks and yellows. The salt, wood, and saggar kilns serve as time machines for the vitrification of the pottery. Working with a minimal amount of glaze and this type of firing enables me to recreate the natural patterns and hues of erosion and sedimentation that make the natural landscape so beautiful. I am trying to recreate in a few days what might have taken the natural world eons to create. I am inspired by the subtle tones and formations that one takes for granted. I am trying to gather all these elements and balance them into my own canvas-a three-dimensional object. In this way, someone can enjoy the natural landscape from inside their home as they would through a window. In a sense I have tried to take what is beautiful outside and embodied into an object that belongs inside. When someone looks at my work I want them to make direct relationships to the formations of the land and tones of the sky and metallic rocks lying just outside their front door.

 

Come meet Logan Wannamaker and learn more on Sunday August 22nd starting at 3pm to 5pm. This event is free to the public, please visit www.shumeicrestone.org or call 256-5284 for more information.

 

Shumei International Institute
3000 East Dream Way Road P.O.Box 998 Crestone, CO 81131-0998