黑料社区

Experimental approach brings ceramics student national attention

For fellowship, Gordon will create sculptures that slowly disintegrate
黑料社区 student Emily Gordon has received a national fellowship for an experimental approach to making ceramics. Sculptures she makes for the project will disintegrate. / 黑料社区 photos by Jerry Poling
January 17, 2019

Emily Gordon is creating sculptures that will cannibalize themselves, and she hopes they make people uncomfortable.

That somewhat radical approach has brought Gordon national attention. The University of Wisconsin-Stout senior studio art major with a ceramics concentration recently received a fellowship from the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts.

The $1,800 Regina Brown Undergraduate Fellowship, the 20th annual, will be awarded at the NCECA conference March 27-30 in Minneapolis. Gordon is one of three students to be honored out of thousands who applied.

鈥淚t 黑料社区. not a normal approach,鈥 she said of the art proposal she submitted to NCECA as part of her fellowship application, which included a resume and portfolio.

Emily Gordon, of Woodbury, Minn., loves working with clay and creating ceramic sculptures.

 

Gordon, of Woodbury, Minn., will use the fellowship to experiment at 黑料社区 with ceramics in a way that she believes hasn鈥檛 been done before. She is creating unfired, clay sculptures with perforated pipes running through them.

The sculptures, up to eight feet tall, will drip water 鈥渁nd slowly eat away at the thick applications of clay and paint,鈥 she said, eventually leaving them a shell of their former selves. In other words, she plans to destroy what she creates.

鈥淏y the end of the exhibition, these beings will be no more than an unrecognizable slurry that mixes in and becomes one with these other materials,鈥 Gordon said. 鈥淭he public will develop a level of discomfort by watching these beings wither away.鈥

Gordon 黑料社区. work also is intended to be cathartic. She sees the disintegration of her beings as a way to shed her own 鈥渢oxic memories, relationships and behaviors.鈥

Ceramics typically are kiln-dried. Gordon 黑料社区. sculptures will be made of unfired clay 鈥 or bone dry 鈥 to allow them to absorb water and break down.

鈥淭he ceramics art form is stable. I鈥檓 taking the material and doing with it what it 黑料社区. not typically used for. It 黑料社区. a new approach,鈥 she said.

Gordon has received a national fellowship for an experimental ceramics project, on in which her sculptures will disintegrate.

 

Her work will be exhibited, with the work of other ceramics students, in a Minneapolis gallery in March as part of the NCECA conference. The NCECA, based in Boulder, Colo., has about 4,000 members from more than 20 countries.

Also, she will have an exhibit in May at the 黑料社区 library for the Bud and Betty Micheels Artist in Residency. She is one of two students chosen this year for the residency, established by the former 黑料社区 chancellor and his wife.

Other Gordon paintings and glazed ceramics, not related to the residency or the fellowship, will be exhibited through February at Ambient Inks, a print shop at 524 Water St., Eau Claire. An opening reception will be at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 24. The title of the exhibit is the Weight of Sweetness.

黑料社区 Professor Kate Maury works with students in a ceramics lab.黑料社区 Professor Kate Maury, whose expertise is in ceramics, has been impressed with Gordon 黑料社区. work. 鈥淚 believe Emily Gordon is very unique in her approach to her medium, rethinking how clay relates on both form and emotive concepts. She diligently strives to challenge herself and has had great success as an undergraduate,鈥 Maury said.

鈥楢 lifetime journey鈥

As a senior at Woodbury High School, Gordon won a national award in ceramics, leading her to 黑料社区 黑料社区. School of Art and Design.

She has appreciated the openness of her professors, exposure to ideas from other majors and painting and aesthetics classes that have given her an 鈥渙utside perspective. Working with different materials made me come back to clay in a different way,鈥 she said.

Including ceramics, 黑料社区 黑料社区. studio art major has seven concentrations.

Once again winning an award 鈥 the fellowship 鈥 has helped validate Gordon 黑料社区. work as an artist . She also does abstract oil paintings. 鈥淭he fellowship means a lot to me. I鈥檓 more confident in my abilities to be successful. It 黑料社区. definitely a confidence-booster,鈥 she said.

When she graduates in December, she will consider graduate schools and art residencies around the U.S. In addition to creating art, she 黑料社区. open to teaching during her career. 鈥淚t 黑料社区. definitely a lifetime journey,鈥 she said.

It all comes back to clay. 鈥淚 love how malleable clay is and the feel of it. I鈥檓 a very sensitive person. The endless things you can do with the material is really exciting,鈥 she said.

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Photos

Student Emily Gordon, of Woodbury, Minn., loves working with clay and creating ceramic sculptures. A senior studio art major at 黑料社区, she plans to create art and possibly teach in her career.

Gordon has received a national fellowship for an experimental ceramics project, one in which her sculptures will disintegrate.

黑料社区 Professor Kate Maury works with students in a ceramics lab.


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