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Early Autumn Featured Artists

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ARTIST SERVICES

ARTIST SERVICES

Jill Foote-Hutton, Kirk Lyttle, Laurie Shaman, Andy Shaw

Jewelry Spotlight: Heather Nameth Bren

September 12 – October 8

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Jill Foote-Hutton

Raytown, MO

Jill Foote-Hutton has always been committed to the craft of storytelling. Born and raised by the descendants of hillbillies, Foote-Hutton is an artist following in the tradition of medicine woman and storyteller through her creative practice dubbed Whistlepig Studio. “Monster” is a device she uses to engage a conversation about the disparities of what we think and what we do, about the distance between two human beings, and the nature of lightness and darkness. She posits that totem, talisman, god, demon, angel, witch, hero, and spirit (from any tradition) have been equally used as devices of liberation and oppression. Renamed “Guardian Monsters” in her practice, Foote-Hutton, aims to seize the power of those objects from an authoritarian state of mind and put power back into the hearts and minds of the individual. They are a shibboleth. They are an interpretation. They are multivalent.

Kirk Lyttle St. Paul, MN

Kirk Lyttle was born and schooled in Seattle, Washington. After working as the editorial cartoonist for the UW Daily, Lyttle In addition to his ceramics practice, Lyttle was an illustrator and graphic artist for the Pioneer Press. He and his wife, potter Jil Franke, fire their pots alongside Linda Christianson in her double-chambered Bourry box kiln. His work slowly evolves with the introduction of new clays, slips, and the nature of the drawings that grace his pots. Of his work, Lyttle says, “I’d like my pots to appear as though they were knocked off on a whim; the drawings have been done for my personal amusement. If some of them have acquired an aura that transcends these inauspicious beginnings, I’d like it if this were attributed to the mysterious atmosphere of the wood-fired kiln.”

Laurie Shaman Chicago, IL

Laurie Shaman is a ceramist who handbuilds vessels, tiles, and wall pieces in porcelain. She has maintained a studio practice for over 40 years, created a Chicago Public Art tile mural, and has held arts administration positions at the Art Institute of Chicago and Lillstreet Art Center. Her work features painted, incised, or carved imagery with varying combinations of animals, birds, landscapes, and figures. Shaman hopes the pieces evoke a combination of classical and contemporary sensibilities in shape and surface quality.

Andy Shaw

Baton Rouge, LA

Andy Shaw is associate professor of ceramics at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. His creative projects include the Mid-Atlantic Keramik Exchange (Reykjavik, Iceland), the LSU Ceramics Factory production studio, and co-directing the Queeramics Symposium at LSU. Shaw has completed artist residencies at the SÍM Residency (Reykjavik, Iceland) and Íshús Hafnarfjarðar (Hafnarfjörður, Iceland), the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (Halifax), The Clay Studio of Philadelphia as the 2007 Evelyn Shapiro Foundation Fellow, The Archie Bray Foundation (Helena, Montana), Arrowmont School of Crafts (Gaitlinburg, Tennesee), and a McKnight Artist Residency for Ceramic Artists at Northern Clay Center. In 2000, he earned his MFA from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University and in 1992 a BA in history from Kenyon College (Gambier, Ohio).

Winter Open House

Save the Date!

Sunday, November 19, 12 – 4 pm

FREE

Heather Nameth Bren received an MFA in ceramics from the University of Kansas (Lawrence). in 2003. Since then, Bren has received grants through the Jerome and McKnight Foundations and has been recognized as a Ceramics Monthly Emerging Artist. She is a 2013 recipient of a Minnesota State Arts Board Artist Initiative Grant which funded her research on Delft tiles. Her creative practice and ceramic exploration are diverse, including ceramic jewelry, installation, functional ware, and her most recent "tile paintings." Bren’s tile paintings explore the relationship of inner trauma to external environments and conditions. In contrast, Bren’s “uncentered centering cups” encourage and affirm the user with playful imagery, cheeky quips, and glitter glaze. In addition to her studio practice, Bren has been a professor of art since 2007. She currently teaches at Bethel University (St. Paul, Minnesota).

Please join us for our annual Winter Open House. Help us launch the winter holiday season with shopping in our galleries. Hands-on clay activities and artist demonstrations will both inspire you and capture your attention. We invite all members to the Preview Hour from 11 am – 12 pm and bring along a friend with whom they can share their member discount in the galleries. Free gift wrapping will be available for all purchases!

Please visit our website for updates as the event draws nearer. We will continue to ensure we design our events with the health and safety of our community as a first priority.

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