My blog version of the article I wrote for NCECA 2014 Journal as Demonstrating Artist
Michelle Erickson
Michelle Erickson
My career-long fascination
with ceramic history during the period of Western exploration, expansion, and
dominion began with exposure to archeological ceramics in the “colonial
triangle” of Virginia. Fragments of British, European, Asian, and Native
American pottery unearthed in early colonial excavations embody a remarkable
global convergence of cultures in clay.
My now 25 years in the rediscovery of lost ceramic techniques of this
era has come to define my work as a contemporary artist.
My work has been
cleverly and aptly described from time to time by critical genius. Garth Clark
once dubbed me a “Post Modern Chameleon.” (Fig.1)
The then prince of craft Glenn Adamson prior to his recent coronation at the Museum of Arts and Design encapsulated the nature of my practice as both a “grim fascination” like “a driver slowing down beside an accident” and a ‘Magpie flitting through ceramic history.’ (Fig.2)
Liberty private collection Photo Gavin Ashworth NY |
Pagoda Tulipiere's Museum of Art and Design NY Photo Gavin Ashworth NY |
Ceramics in America editor Robert Hunter poetically captured the spiritual side of creation describing my trancelike modeling of clay forms as “channeling an ancient votive maker worrying the clay between her fingers.” (Fig.3)
Temptation Posset Private Collection |
Pectin Shell Teapot 2005 Photo Gavin Ashworth NY |
During
my tenure at the V&A I created three films in collaboration with the V&A
and The Chipstone Foundation that document the process of recreating two icons
from British ceramic history: one illustrating the arcane forming, decoration
and social function of an 18th-century English delft puzzle jug and the
second revealing the enigmatic techniques and elite production of a 1750’s Staffordshire
pectin shell agate teapot. (Fig. 5)
Making an Agate Teapot Video Still Juriaan Booij |
My V&A Residency Cases Photo Robert Hunter |
In my V&A residency studio with videographer Juriaan Booij filming Making an English Delft Puzzle Jug Photo Robert Hunter |
Beginning in 2001 my experimental archeology became the subject of an
ongoing collaboration with the debut of the annual journal Ceramics In America now in it’s fourteenth year. The journal published
by the Chipstone Foundation has both incorporated and initiated projects
resulting in several comprehensive articles on my process of reverse engineering
historical ceramic technologies. To date they include English slipware
techniques, English agateware, recreating an
18th-century American porcelain picklestand from the Philadelphia China
Manufactory of Bonnin and Morris. In addition, I
worked in collaboration with ceramic historians and curators to reproduce a North
Carolina Moravian figural flask, a ring bottle, and several slipware objects. (Fig.8)
2nd Amendment Squirrel courtesy of Ceramics in America 2009 |
In 2008 my commissioned artwork appeared on the cover of Ceramics in America and featured in the
article Fit For A Queen written by
Ivor Noel Hume OBE who tells the story of my design and creation of the
official gift given to Queen Elizabeth II during her historic visit to Virginia
in 2007 commemorating the 400th anniversary of founding of Jamestown.
(Fig 9)
My work with Ceramics in America has
given me access that includes the amazing photography of Gavin Ashworth, to an extraordinary breadth of context and scholarship on many previously unpublished archeological and antique ceramic collections. These lengthy full color illustrated articles have been a mutually beneficial experience tailor made for publishing this aspect of my practice. Equally important, however, is the significant role this historically based perspective on the American ceramic psyche plays in the development of my art. Whether using the precedent of anti-slavery ceramics for the basis for my series on 21st-century child soldiering, (Fig.10)
Front and Centerpiece collection of the Chipstone Foundation Photo Gavin Ashworth NY |
Fossil Teapot collection of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts 21st Century Galleries Photo Gavin Ashworth NY |
21st century material culture is inundated with the
technological phenomenon of seemingly instantaneous proliferation in art and
design yet it reminds me of the invention of fast food- it seemed so great at
the time. Now more than ever the art of the hand is increasingly significant in
the context of virtual experience and continues to be irreplaceable even in the
production of our most sophisticated technology. Clearly evidenced in recent
headlines like “300,000 Foxconn workers produce 500,000 iphone 5S units every
day”[viii]
Has Technology advanced art? I like to look at our most sophisticated
advancements- the future- as arcane methods of the past and in that future the
unconscious pursuit of technology for it’s own sake is force without direction an ambition
that has the dubious distinction of being the greatest thing since splitting
the atom. (Fig.12)
Demon and Deity-pot collection of Arkansas Art Center Photo Gavin Ashworth NY |
I suggest that it’s when
art advances technology that humanity is universally advanced and somehow clay
is always at the center. Grandiose words from “Hampton potter Michelle
Erickson”.
Solo exhibition Michelle Erickson: Conversations In Clay is on view at Virginia MOCA thru Aug 16 2015
1) Garth Clark Blue +
White = Radical Catalogue essay, Garth Clark Gallery NY 2002
2) Glenn Adamson Re-enter
The Dragon: the Post Modernism Of Chinese Ceramics, Transfer: The Influence of China on
World Ceramics. Colloquies on Art & Archaeology in Asia No. 24 Cover
Article, Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art page 158
3) Robert Hunter Specializing
in the Diverse: Kerameiki Techni Aug 2004, page 43-47
4) Edmund de Waal The
Pot Book, Phaidon Press Oct 10 2011 page
5) 2007? Daily Press whatever article Mark St John Erickson
Michelle Erickson has a B.F.A. from The College of
William and Mary. Her contemporary ceramics in museums collections include The
Chipstone Foundation, The Museum of Art and Design, The Long Beach Museum of
Art The New-York Historical Society,The Peobody Essex, Yale University Gallery,
The Carnegie Museum, The Mint Museums, Seattle Art Museum, Virginia Museum of
Fine Arts, Cincinnati Art Museum, Arkansas Art Center, The Potteries Museum
Stoke on Trent, UK and the Victoria and Albert Museum London. Her work has been
featured in numerous national and international publications. Erickson is
renowned for her research into 17th- and 18th-century
ceramic techniques published extensively in Ceramics in America and has
lectured and demonstrated her work widely for scholarly groups and institutions.
She has designed and produced ceramics for major motion pictures and HBO series
John Adams. As Artist in Residence at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum in
2012 Erickson created three videos now on the V&A Channel the films were
shown at Ceramic Arts London 2013 and the International Ceramics Festival UK.
She received a Virginia Museum of Fine Arts 2013-14 fellowship. Michelle was guest artist at the North Devon Festival of Pottery, funded by the British Arts Council Sept 2013 Demonstrating Artist NCECA 2014, and Guest Artist at The Metropolitan Museum of Art for their Friday Focus An Artist's Perspective April 25th 2014.
Erickson's recent exhibitions include her solo show Potter's Field was at the Clay Art Center NY April 2014. The NCECA Invitational Exhibition at Milwaukee Art Museum Flow Feb - March 2014. Enough Violence SCC 2013-14 and Traveling exhibition Inciteful Clay
Erickson's recent exhibitions include her solo show Potter's Field was at the Clay Art Center NY April 2014. The NCECA Invitational Exhibition at Milwaukee Art Museum Flow Feb - March 2014. Enough Violence SCC 2013-14 and Traveling exhibition Inciteful Clay
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