Randy Johnston
goldmark
£10
Randy Johnston
goldmark 2018
Randy Johnston A half century ago the British novelist and physicist C.P. Snow commented on the yawning chasm he felt separated what he called the two cultures, that is, the sciences and the humanities. As a young man Randy Johnston moved across that divide, and the catalyst for his shift was clear: Warren MacKenzie. Johnston was headed toward a career as a medical doctor or marine biologist – Jacques-Yves Cousteau was an early hero – when he went in search of a photography course and wound up in an introductory ceramics class instead. MacKenzie was the teacher, and he has been an important figure in Johnston’s life ever since as a mentor, role model, and friend. Turning toward art and away from science does not necessarily mean completely abandoning one for the other. That is especially true with ceramics, with its technical side encompassing such important matters as kiln construction and firing temperatures, clay bodies and glaze formulas. It is even possible that for many potters the technical, analytical aspects of ceramics are an essential part of the appeal, the perfect complement for the expressive, imaginative elements. Ceramics, like photography, enables practitioners to draw upon both the right and left side of the brain in a kind of internal dialogue. Johnston does display some qualities identified with the scientific method: he is organized, a
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20. Tall Figure Vase Copper glaze 47.5 x 24.5 cm
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23. Spoon Form Nuka glaze with brushwork 16.5 x 60 cm
deliberate worker, and a problem-solver who welcomes a good challenge. Yet his love of wood firing suggests a willingness to court chance as well as assert control. No matter how careful the preliminaries, there always remains the ceramic leap of faith involved in surrendering work to the fire for the final stage of creation. A firing may be a kind of experiment, and it may be more than a figure of speech to discuss scientific and mathematical theories or proofs in terms of elegance and beauty, but the scientific pursuit of definitive truths about nature is not the same as the aesthetic search for possibly ambiguous and metaphorical truths about human nature – and Johnston made his choice long ago. Born in 1950, Johnston is, chronologically speaking, a child of the mid-century. His work can be far from what is usually taken as mid-century modern – clean-lined Scandinavian designs, or International Style modern architecture, all glass and metal and right angles. Still, Johnston represents that historical moment as both a ceramicist and a modernist. As a ceramicist, because he in effect belongs to the third generation of the modern studio pottery movement, following Bernard Leach and then MacKenzie (and MacKenzie’s contemporary, the Japanese master Tatsuzo Shimaoka, with whom Johnston apprenticed). As a modernist, because his artistic vision extends beyond ceramics to other art ascendant at the time, New York School painting and sculpture. It is also strongly shaped by the early 20th century avant-garde, including the revival of interest in
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archaic and non-Western art that accompanied the rise of modernism. Johnston has for a long time demonstrated an individual style, with a recognizable, if constantly evolving repertory of forms. The most notable feature may well be the sense of physicality. Johnston’s work often appears monumental, but never ponderous. Johnston likes to match assertive physicality with equally bold surface treatment – thick-flowing black and white ribbons set against earth-toned backgrounds, punctuated by bursts of brighter colors like small eruptions. The designs can attain a remarkable complexity, as on a platter that may be regarded as a purely abstract emblem, loaded with mythical possibilities, yet also manages to suggest a landscape view with layered mountain ranges or perhaps a glimpse of a galaxy whirling at the edge of the cosmos. There is another side to Johnston’s sensibility, however, visible in more lyrical works with white-on-white surface treatments, often delicate linear designs that conjure up rain, or grass and plants blowing in the wind. Similarly, while the sturdy slab constructions rely on a meticulous, slow process, with yunomi and tea bowls a sense of immediacy is essential, so Johnston works more freely, to achieve a sense of ‘grace and casualness’. Whether working in a heroic or a lyric key, Johnston always seems to find a way to create a sense of visual drama. He will place a raised seam slightly off-center on a vessel form to introduce tension, splitting the space with the kind of ‘zip’ effect
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5. Large Round Platter Inlaid rope pattern. Glaze trailing 10 x 54 cm
identified with the painter Barnett Newman. Or he will exploit the contrast between top and bottom, as in the full-bodied storage vessels, where he uses his experience with the wood kiln to develop a division between heavily fire-affected areas above and relatively untouched areas beneath. In a work with its vertical shaft divided into alternating light and dark bands, the precise geometry sets off the dark fluid form pouring down the side; in a spectacular bonus, near the bottom colored streaks appear in that luscious spill. This effect, as Johnston notes, could not have been predicted, and it is not the only recent case where the blessings conferred by the kiln show why wood firing can be so seductive. An oval form carefully placed to catch the kiln’s flow of fire and heat on an edge exceeded expectations by emerging with two brilliant yellow areas that sing out, while the extraordinary textures and layering on the surfaces of other works provide a kind of deeply compelling, endlessly fascinating abstraction that belongs to ceramics alone. Now that Johnston is no longer teaching, he has more time to explore some of the many ideas that have engaged him over the years. The complex nature of his process is evident in how his long-term interest in the work of two great early modern artists has affected his recent work. First, there are the elegant concave works indebted to Giacometti’s Spoon Woman (itself influenced by the Dan people’s ceremonial spoons). They include small raised elements like handles that almost make them seem like versions of tribal artifacts, for winnowing or grinding perhaps.
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But in fact the raised elements had their origin in the vertical nose forms on Cycladic sculptures, which Johnston shifted to the horizontal, a reminder of how an artist’s sense of formal necessity can generate its own logic. The surface treatments, subdued rather than expressionistic, further reveal Johnston’s artistic method as he tries different options: parallel lines in one, a herringbone pattern in another that recalls Shimaoka’s signature imprinted cord effects, and a white version that conjures up a ghost-like stringed instrument (or a grove of saplings), with a horizontal dark line to provide counterpoint and reveal once again Johnston’s finely calibrated sense of division and proportion. Johnston’s recent works also display a fascination with pedestals, inspired by Brancusi, that shows how a focus on a single element can shape an entire series. For Brancusi, a pedestal was not a minor adjunct to the sculpture but an integral element. Johnston has often used supports to maintain stability, as can be seen in the beautiful recent work that incorporates three shallow, dish-like forms set at different angles. (These forms, in another display of Johnstonian transformation, derive from Chilean winemaking tools; though made of clay, their surfaces suggest well-worn wood or metal.) With more vertical, vase-like forms Johnston became interested in exploring how the addition of a plinth-like base created a more figural, sculptural look: in some the base remains a conventional rectangular block separate from what stands above; in some the base is a curved
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continuation; and some are in effect both, as in the case of that astonishing fluid, frozen outpouring that links the banded sculpture and its base. Finally, there is the work that consists of a base form, a rectangular slab, with deep gouged grooves – a demonstration of how the exploration of one element can lead in an entirely new direction, opening up new possibilities. Johnston’s teapots deserve comment because they reveal other aspects of his method and style. No delicate porcelain confections, they possess a characteristic rugged strength. They are not wheel thrown; Johnston uses paper patterns to create the individual elements before assembling the whole. They may at first glance appear almost willfully archaic and nonmodern, with curves that avoid sinuous sleekness and other elements that present a disconcerting angularity. But a more extended look reveals a jazzy piece of rhythmic play, with visual drama once again provided by the carefully cultivated surface effects from the wood firing, with the lighter areas on top set against the darker ones below. The bulging, hefty handles are not the product of ergonomic research resulting in the perfect design for the perfect composite user, but imply a particular kind of firm grasp, with the irregularity adding character. The bend in the spout may suggest an elbow or knee, but actually derives from Minoan and early Iranian ceramics, in pots with bird-beak spouts. One favorite teapot design, with a rectilinear rather than curvilinear body, is based on Japanese cast iron tea kettles. Part of Johnston’s fascination with the Japanese original came
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from an unfinished, raw edge required by the casting process, but he was also intrigued by the incorporation of circle, square and triangle as basic elements, so that there is a geometrical, metaphysical concept embodied in the work’s physical form. That brings us full circle, back to the relationship between the two cultures. Johnston’s interest in the intersection of mathematics and art, whether in the geometry of a teapot or the possible application of the Golden Spiral and Fibonacci figures to a curve, is too particular and personal to neutralize Lord Snow’s warning about the general separation between the sciences and the humanities. But it does offer one more powerful reminder of how Johnston’s expansive vision is constantly bringing together past and present, the conceptual and the formal, in the service of his art. Robert Silberman Writer, curator and professor of Art History at University of Minnesota
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1. Round Teapot Over handle. Kaolin flashing. Slip & natural ashing 10 x 14 cm
7. Lobed Vase Anagama. Natural ash & shino slip 26 x 26 cm
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9. Oval Vase with Skirt Nuka glaze with brushwork 29.5 x 23 cm
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29. Triple Spoon Form Copper glaze 15 x 57.5 cm
18. Squared Vase Broad black stripes. Crackle shino 37.5 x 11 cm
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34. Large Jar Anagama. Natural ash with feldspar 39 x 38 cm
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27. Multiple Spoon Form Copper glaze 8.5 x 57.5 cm
28. Folded Tray Form Nuka glaze with brushwork 8 x 40 cm
30. Large Bowl Faceted. Copper glaze 17.5 x 51.5 cm
36. Triangle Bowl Shell mark. Natural ash 9.5 x 30 cm
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10. Figure Vase Plinth. Copper glaze 32 x 23 cm
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4. Sushi Platter Nuka glaze with brushwork 6 x 28 cm
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24. Boat Form Copper glaze. Herringbone rope pattern 15 x 56 cm
Education 1990 Master of Fine Arts, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville, Illinois 1972 Bachelor of Fine Arts/Studio Arts University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 1975 Pottery of Shimaoka Tatsuzo, who was a student of Shoji Hamada, Mashiko, Japan. Shimaoka was awarded title of Living National Treasure 1997
Professional 1972-Present Studio Artist, River Falls, Wisconsin 1993-2016 Art Department, Professor Emeritus – Ceramics/Drawing University of Wisconsin-River Falls, River Falls, Wisconsin 2008-2013 Chair, University of Wisconsin-River Falls Art Department
Publications 2015 Red Clay Rambler Podcast with Ben Carter In the Studio with Randy Johnston and Jan Mckeachie Johnston, Ceramic Arts Daily, DVD Esteka, Magazine Santiago, Chile New Directions Ceramics by Randy Johnston, essay by Dr Robert Silberman, Pucker Gallery, Boston, MA 2013 Ceramics Monthly, Portfolio Artist, November 2011 On The Edge of Chaos, Ceramics by Randy Johnston, Catalogue, Pucker Gallery, Boston, MA A Force of Nature: The Ceramic Art of Randy Johnston, Syracuse University Press 500 Vases, Lark Books, Julia Galloway, Juror Striking Balance, Catalogue, Pucker Gallery, Boston, MA 2001 American Shino, Catalogue Essay, Babcock Studio Potter, ‘Shimaoka Tatsuzo Enlarging Our Concepts’, Vol. 29, No. 2
11. Tall Squared Vase Form Anagama. Natural ash & crackle shino glaze with brushwork 41 x 16 cm
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2000 Different Stokes International Woodfire Catalogue, 1999, Pub. University of Iowa School of Art, ‘Within the Province of Fire’ 1996 Studio Potter, ‘Mingei Revisited’ 1994 Ceramic Art and Perception, ’Rekindling the Fire’, Vol. 16 1992 Studio Potter, ‘Japan and America: Myth and Reality in Ceramics’, Vol. 21, December 1991 Ceramics Monthly, ‘Portfolio’, October Between Two Fires, Essay for American Wood Fired Catalogue, University of Iowa 1989 Studio Potter, Winter 1983 Studio Potter, ‘Wood Firing’, Vol. II, No. 1
Recent Exhibitions 2017 One Person Exhibition, Pucker Gallery, Boston, MA Confluence Starworks Gallery, International Woodfire Invitation Star, NC Weisman Museum Invitational, St Croix Valley Potters, Minneapolis, MN Louis and Clark College Curaumilla, CHILE Invitational, NCECA Portland, OR MT Hood Community College Invitational, NCECA Portland, OR 2016 UWRF Faculty Phipps Center for the Arts, Hudson, WI One Person Exhibition, Schaller Gallery, St Joseph, MI Casebeer, Gustin, Johnston, Harvey Meadows Gallery, Aspen, CO Morean Center for the Arts Invitational, St Petersburg, FL Pottery NW Invitational, Seattle, WA 2015 One Person Exhibition, Ancient and Modern, Pucker Gallery, Boston, MA State of the Art: Invitational, Giertz Gallery, Parkland College, Champaign, IL Invitational, Schaller Gallery, St Joseph, MI Honoring the Past, Embracing the Future, American Museum of Ceramic Art, Pomona, CA Hamada’s Journey to the West, Mashiko Museum, Mashiko, Japan Anderson Ranch Invitiational, SOFA, Chicago, IL
6. Lobed Vase Anagama. Natural ash & crackle shino glaze 32 x 25 cm
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2014
2013
2012
2011
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My Heart In My Hands Invitational, Flaten Gallery, St Olaf College, Northfield, MN Invitational, Gustin Gallery, New Bedford, MA One Person Exhibition, Augustana College, Sioux Falls, SD Mackenzie’s Influence, St Croix Art Reach Invitational, Stillwater, MN Paper and Clay, Bloomington Art Center, Bloomington, MN NCECA, Grounded in Wisconsin, Students of Randy Johnston, Milwaukee, WI Mentoring Artistic Excellence, Anderson Ranch Invitational, SOFA, Chicago, IL Shino, Endless Variations, NCECA Houston, TX Pucker Gallery, One Person Exhibition, Boston, MA Cape Ann Center for the Arts, Cape Ann, MA La Mesa, Santa Fe Clay at NCECA, Houston, TX The Studio Sessions, Minnesota Artists in the 1970s, MN Museum of Art, St. Paul, MN Huntington Museum of Art, Walter Gropius Award, Huntington, W VA Harvey Meadows Gallery, Snowmass, CO Two Person Exhibition, Grand Hand Gallery, St Paul, MN UWRF Art Faculty, Phipps Center for the Arts, Hudson, WI Single Person Exhibition, Pucker Gallery, Boston, MA Shakerag Summer Faculty, Shakerag, TN La Mesa, Santa Fe Clay at NCECA, National Conference Language of Contemporary Ceramics, Bunnell St. Gallery, Homer, AK Gallery B Square, NCECA, Philadelphia, PA Mashiko Reference Museum, Mashiko, Japan La Mesa Santa Fe Clay, NCECA, Philadelphia, PA Crosscurrents in 20th Century Art: Prints and Ceramics from the Anne C. and Harry Wollman Collection, Currier Museum of Art, Manchester, NH Ceramics/Then Now, Minnesota Museum of Art, St Paul Academy, St Paul, MN
40. Teabowl Anagama. Natural ash 8.5 x 12 cm
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Selected Public Collections Fuller Museum, MA Asian Art Museum, San Francisco, CA Huntington Museum of Art, Huntington W VA Currier Museum of Art, Manchester, NH Newark Museum of Art, Newark, NJ Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA Schein Joseph Museum, Alfred University, Alfred, NY Tikotin Museum, Haifa, Israel Smithsonian Museum of American Art, Washington, DC Yale University, New Haven, CT Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK Nelson Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO Racine Art Museum, Racine, WI Emison Art Center, Greencastle, IN University Art Museum, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ University Art Museum, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Minneapolis, MN Hamada Shoji Foundation, Japan Government of Norway Los Angeles County Museum, Los Angeles, CA Wustum Museum of Art, RAM Racine, WI Rhode Island School of Art Museum, RI
22. Yunomi Nuka glaze with iron brushwork 11 x 9 cm
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Text: © Robert Silberman, 2018 Photographs: © Jay Goldmark Design: Goldmark / Porter ISBN 978-1-909167-52-0 Goldmark, Uppingham Rutland, LE15 9SQ 01572 821424 goldmarkart.com 46. Round Covered Box Nuka glaze 6 x 11 cm
Our profound thanks to Anthony Schaller of Schaller Gallery without whose generous assistance this exhibition would not have been possible.
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