Ceramic Artist
Made with a Bailey Interview featuring Emily Margaret Ulm
Made with a Bailey Interview featuring Emily Margaret Ulm
Edmund de Waal in Paris
After a few days in London Jim and I ventured off by train to Paris. It’s a comfortable and convenient way to get there and when we arrived the city was just bustling with people. After so many lock-downs in Paris the joy in the air was palpable. We found ourselves smiling and laughing along with everyone we passed. The sound and sight of children playing freely without masks was emotionally overwhelming and reminded us of how much Covid has affected us all. Read more...
Made with a Bailey Interview featuring Rebecca Manson
Made with a Bailey Interview featuring Rebecca Manson
Made with a Bailey Interview featuring @FromFran
Made with a Bailey Interview featuring Fran Aldea
Mystery Pot 43 Maker, Helen Naha "Feather Woman"
The maker of our Mystery Pot 43 is Helen Naha, the matriarch of a Hopi-Tewa clan of potters who sign their pots with a stylized feather. Our pot is a beautiful example of her Black on White pottery. The Awatovi star design was revived by Feather Woman over her lifetime. One of several designs she developed from shards she collected from the Awatovi ruins.
Read on for a detailed biography of this remarkable Native American Pottery Legend by Grey Wolf Gallery in Arizona. Visit their website https://greywolfgalleryaz.com/ for old and current Native American Artist.
Made with a Bailey Interview featuring Nicole Boenigk
Nicole Boenigk of Earth and Empathy ceramics shares her favorite things about working in clay, how she uses her favorite Bailey products, and a little advice for those just beginning to work in clay. Read more about Nicole and her Mother-owned, small ceramics business Earth and Empathy in this article.
Mystery Pot 42 Maker, Wayne Higby
Wayne Higby is an acclaimed ceramic artist, beloved Professor of Ceramic Art at Alfred University, and Director of the Alfred University Ceramic Museum. Wayne Higby was born in 1943 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He received his BFA from the University of Colorado/Boulder in 1966. The landscapes of his youth were a lasting influence in his life and work.
#MadewithaBailey Interview with Kevin Hicks
Ephraim Pottery's Kevin Hicks tells us about the collaborative studio he founded, "Right now is a profound time of appreciation. My studio has spent the last 24 years refining our collaboration model and the mood in the studio is dynamic and thriving. The future seems as wide open as it has ever been."
Mystery Pot 41 Maker, Gerry Williams 1926-2014
The potter's life as lived by Gerry Williams was exceptional. Gerry Williams will always be remembered for his outstanding contributions to the field of ceramics.
Forty years of innovative ceramic work began with functional earthenware made with red clay he dug from New Hampshire's mudflats. Always changing and evolving, his lifetime body of work includes red earthenware, porcelain, and stoneware; gas-fired and wood-fired; functional ware, sculptural forms, wall plagues, and bold political sculpture. His original research in wet fire technique and his photo resist technique were groundbreaking.
Co-founding both Studio Potter and Phoenix Workshops with his wife Julie in 1972, the Williams were able to share Gerry's love of and enthusiasm for our humble medium worldwide. A potter's life well lived, indeed.
COVID-19 Relief & Resources
It’s spring but it’s hard to know what to do some days in these times of COVID-19. With social distancing and the complete disruption of our work and play schedules, some days are just plain difficult. Here in our local community, we have found ways to take care of each other and to make sure people at risk are getting what they need while confined to their houses. We've included links to resources.