The New Ceramic Presence
The New Ceramic Presence
The New Ceramic Presence
by ROSE SLIVKA
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obsessed by the need for arrivala pursuit that eludes us. And so, we are always
on the go. (Our writersWalt Whitman,
Herman Melville, Thomas Wolfe, and,
most recently, Jack Kerouachave struggled for a literary art form to express this.)
Having solved our need for mobility by
mechanical means, we love engineering
and performance and the materials and
tools by which we have achieved them.
In our involvement with practical matters, we were too busy really to cultivate
the idea of beauty. Beauty as suchthe
classical precepts of harmonious completion, of perfection, of balanceis still a
Western European idea, and it is entirely
possible that it is not the esthetic urgency
of an artist functioning in an American
climatea climate which not only has
been infused with the dynamics of machine technology, but with the action of
menruggedly individual and vernacular
men (the pioneer, the cowboy) with a
genius for improvisation. Our environment, our temperament, our creative
tensions do not seem to encourage the
making of beauty as such, but rather
the act of beauty as creative adventure
energy at worktools and materials finding each othermachines in movement
power and speedalways incomplete,
always in process.
As far back as 1870, a Shaker spokesman declared that Shaker architecture
ignored "architectural effect and beauty
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Above: Abstract wall piece, 4' x 4', of grog clay tiles with slip and oxide
wash set in polyester and grog grouting by James Crumrine.
Below: Brown and white plate, 15" in diameter, with relief design by Ann Stockton.
Opposite page: Stoneware, 12" x 14", with black and orange glazes by Hui Ka Kwong.
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assumes personal responsibility for its esthetic and material qualityit is craft. At
the point that all links with the idea of
function have been severed, it leaves the
field of the crafts.
Ceramics, perhaps more than any other
craft, throughout its long history has produced useful objects which are considered
fine art. Time has a way of overwhelming the functional values of an object
that outlives the men who made and
used it, with the power of its own objective presencethat life-invested quality of being that transcends and energizes.
When this happens, such objects are
forever honored for their own sakes.
We are now groping for a new esthetic
to meet the needs of our time, or perhaps
it is a new anti-esthetic to break visual
patterns that no longer suffice. The most
powerful forces of our environment
electronic and atomic, inner and outer
space, speedare invisible to the naked
eye. Our esthetic tradition, involved as it
has been with visual experience, does not
satisfy the extension and growth of reality in our time. Our greatest sensory barrier to a new esthetic is visual enslavement in a subvisual world. The aspect of
man is no longer the center of things, and
his eyes are only accessories of his own
growing sense of displacement.
Throughout the arts in America we are
in the presence of a quest for a deeper
feeling of presence.
The American potter, isolated from the
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