While in high school ceramics in Rhode Island, I found myself
fascinated with clay. I was fortunate to have a great teacher (Judy Speyer).
Judy encouraged me to pursue clay in college. While at Skidmore College
(1979-83), I was a Fine Arts major with a concentration in Ceramics. This
brought me to a Masters program at Boston University’s Program in
Artisanry. After a successful thesis graduate show (1986), my direction
changed, and I went to work in my family’s building-supply business.
Fast forward to 2014. After a 28-year absence from working in clay, I
then reconnected to it at a small studio called Joy Pottery (in Bryan, Texas).
Ever since then, bringing back my past to the present has been a wonderful
experiment. While at Joy Pottery, I honed my production pottery skills, and
soon found myself making water-sealed fermentation crocks. These crocks
are used to make fermented food at home, such as sauerkraut and pickles.
I still make these today.
I relocated back to the Northeast in 2018. This was the year I was
awarded a Fellowship at Salem Art Works (in Salem, New York). While
there, I was introduced to wood-fired ceramics. I find the process of wood
firing quite exhilarating. There are many days of constant stocking (feeding
wood) to the firebox done in shifts. The flame and ash from the wood hug
the clay works as they travel through the kiln. Then they exit through the
chimney, making it breathe like a mythical dragon. The effects of this flow
can be seen on the ceramic work as wonderful patterns.
I am currently working at Launch Space in Orange, Massachusetts. I
do all my production there, as well as teach. I fire my work at various
wood-fired kilns in upstate New York, New Hampshire, and Connecticut.