Post reblogged from Ceramics Now Magazine with 9 notes
Ehren Tool: Production or Destruction / Craft and Folk Art Museum, Los Angeles, USA
May 27 – September 9, 2012Former Marine and ceramist Ehren Tool exhibits war awareness work at CAFAM.
Opening reception: Saturday, May 26, 6 – 9 pm.
“The best way to destroy your enemy is to make him your friend.” – Abraham LincolnCoinciding with Memorial Day, the Craft and Folk Art Museum (CAFAM) presents Ehren Tool: Production or Destruction, a solo exhibition of ceramist and former Marine, Ehren Tool. Emblazoned with the haunting imagery of armed conflict, Tool creates handmade ceramic cups as a medium to address war and the violent rhetoric and imagery used to perpetuate it. The exhibition will feature 1,000 handcrafted cups, video, installation, photographs, and printed materials.
Twenty years after his service in the first Gulf War, Tool’s firsthand contact with the reality of war is manifest in the thousands of cups he dutifully produces. The cups will be exhibited at CAFAM in “units” based on military formations of “squads” (13), “platoons” (55), and “companies” (225), serving as a visual reminder of each Marine within a military unit. Each cup is uniquely crafted, decorated with ceramic decals of soldiers’ photos, propaganda, war porn, and sculptural reliefs shaped like bombs, guns, or medals.
Recent events such as the Occupy movements and the incendiary language of current election campaigns figure strongly in his new work, as well as veteran suicides and stories of U.S. Marines desecrating bodies of the deceased. Other imagery alludes to the culpability of video games, toys, and pornography in desensitizing the public to the emotional toll of war.
Tool insists that his art is not anti-war, and prefers to characterize it as “war awareness” work. “It is not my intention to teach or preach. It is not possible to communicate the pain, waste, or intensity of war. My work deals with the uneasy collision, and collusion, between military and civilian cultures,” he says.
By putting people in contact with the imagery of war through an everyday household item, he hopes to make people think more often about war and it’s consequences in a meaningful way. “Letter to President Obama” (2009) is among the several letters he wrote to national and corporate heads urging them to consider the outcome of supporting continued war efforts. He also sent a cup to each of these leaders, which elicited responses from politicians such as Karl Rove.
Though the cups are functional drinking vessels, they are also memory objects that contain unspoken stories about fallen soldiers and wounded survivors. The installation “393” (2004) is a striking display of 393 shattered cups that represent the number of U.S. combat casualties during the first year of the second Gulf War. In the video “1.5 Second War Memorial,” a different cup is shot to pieces every 1.5 seconds, each signifying a soldier or civilian who has died in a war.
Tool will be on-site at CAFAM for an artist residency between June 1 and June 15, where he will set up a ceramic studio in the courtyard to encourage public conversations and share his work in progress. He will be giving away all the cups he makes at CAFAM.
Source: ceramicsnow
Photo reblogged from feasting with gans with 6,154 notes
Phillip Stearns, DCP_0267, 2012. 9” x 6”. Digital C-Print.
RECOMMENDED: A Camera Darkly, curated by A. E. Benenson and featuring the work of Phillip Stearns and Christian de Vietri, is currently on view at The Camera Club of New York (336 West 37th Street, Suite 206) through June 23, 2012. The work on display engages early photographic techniques and the genre’s more contemporary forms. Stearns rewires a digital camera’s photosensitive chips to respond to electric pulses instead of light. The resulting images resemble 19th Century light-less entoptic images. De Vietri submits a series of Gustave Doré black and white lithographs to a scanner, which translates the prints into waves of color, suggesting a complex relationship between printmaking and digital production.
Source: sculpture-center
Photo reblogged from pppots with 5 notes
Green Dream, Earthenware with translucent glazes, 12” x 12” x 30”, 2011
This piece was accepted to the 19th San Angelo National Ceramic Competition juried by Garth Clark and Mark Del Vecchio http://www.samfa.org/ncc.htm
Inspired by Robert Arneson’s ‘portrait of David’, in which Gilhooly is represented gazing inwardly to his beloved frogworld, this piece represents my own inner vision, conjured by memories of walking the damp English hillsides covered in fiddle headed ferns.
Green Dream is also my interpretation of the archetypal Chinese ‘Boshanlu’, which generally consisted of a bowl and a high cover in the form of mountain peaks. Practically they were incense burners, however, they were also scholarly objects for meditation, symbolizing the abode of the immortals. The green glaze dripping up, represents the rising smoke or wisps of morning dew.
Source: matthewgroves
Photo reblogged from Travelling Aloud with 97 notes
Petra (Jordan) Carved in Books
By Guy Laramee
Source: travelhighlights
Photo reblogged from pppots with 13 notes
Practice zero tolerance (Clio)
2006
Terracotta
Source: pppots
Inspiration for wood and ceramic vases that I was planning on making after I get more practice on the wood lathe. My work tends to be fairly brutal, so it wouldn’t be this tight looking.
Photo reblogged from pppots with 28 notes
Damian Moppett, “Portrait/Self Portrait”, 2007–2011. Plaster, stoneware, Styrofoam, wood, 44 x 25 x 25 1/2 inches (112 x 64 x 65 cm)
Source: michaelswaney
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