Reflections from 2023 Kira Fournier Scholarship Recipient Maureen Mills

When I found out I received the Kira Fournier Scholarship to attend the North Country Studio Workshop with Chris Staley this past January, I cried. I knew Kira and Ben and worked closely with them at the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen for years. Our professional and personal relationships meant a great deal to me, and I felt like this opportunity was a very special way to honor that.

I have attended NCSW a number of times, and every time it helped me think through my own work and take time to explore a new idea. That happened very differently this time.

A large part of the experience were the participants in this year’s wheel workshop with Chris Staley. Everyone participated at a very high level of professionalism, whether they were potters, or teachers, or designers. While most participants had a high level of skill with clay, even that didn’t matter. Everyone participated on a level playing field, because it was more than a workshop about just making.

Nearly every participant was there for the same reason, to share the time with Chris Staley. His reputation as a thinker and a maker preceded him, and while we all watched him work through some demonstrations, we also did drawing exercises together, did writing exercises together, shared readings, worked on the wheel together, shared in collaborations too. Everyone at one point or another shared their vulnerabilities. Every day exposed something new and even raw in each of us. Tears of emotion were shed and shared regularly, by each of us in turn, including Chris.

I don’t think a single one of us came to the workshop just to see how Chris did something on the wheel. He did work on and off the wheel and shared his philosophies, and we watched and listened; it was meaningful to each of us individually and as a group.

On the last day of the workshop, Chris gave a gift of a small porcelain bowl to each of us. Mine was a simple hemispherical bowl with a thick satin finish in a pale blue celadon. We were, again, all moved to tears by the generosity and thoughtfulness of the gift. I returned home with my bowl and went about daily living with it on the kitchen table. Some days I filled it with fruit, some days with candy. Every day I picked it up, held it, examined it, and enjoyed its shape, color, texture, brightness; in short, every single thing about it. I was taken with its simplicity and elegance, and I knew it had more to say to me.

One day after lunch I said out loud to my husband, “Oh my gosh, I know what I have to do! I need to do my text and texture work in porcelain!” The clarity I experienced in this realization is something I did not expect. And upon considering more about why this felt so right, I realized that for me, working with porcelain would be diametrically opposed to my current stoneware work from a wood kiln.

I surprised myself to have come to this conclusion; I have resisted working in porcelain because it is fussy and requires a particular kind of attention that stoneware doesn’t. While my stoneware work has focused on layers of pattern and even color, what interests me is doing my text and texture work in porcelain is allowing the process and not the material to dictate where the work goes. Allowing for thick or irregular forms and working toward soft finishes is where I can begin to embrace porcelain.

I’ve learned not to put too much pressure on myself during a workshop, to allow for the experience to unfold at its own pace. My experience that week was unmatched by other experiences, and it will remain with me, and in my work, and continue to unfold.

You can find Maureen’s work at https://www.sliptrail.com/ and on instagram.

Photos by Maureen Mills

2023 Recipient of Jackie Abrams Legacy Scholarship

My name is Ellie Duncan, I am an artist and urban farmer living in Bellingham Washington. I was fortunate enough to receive the Jackie Abrams Scholarship which allowed me to travel to North Country Studio Workshops this winter to take a pottery class with Chris Staley.

Chris’s class completely expanded the horizons of my ceramic work and how I think about the artistic process. It was a deeply meaningful and introspective workshop which was held together by a joyful and supportive group of other potters and artists, and Chris’s brilliant teaching. In only a week I made deep connections with artists from across the country, and with these people and Chris’s guidance, I broke through some creative barriers and felt a whole new world of potential with what I could explore in my ceramic work.

 The workshop encouraged me to be as liberated as I could in exploring the forms I was making, pulling me away from ruts that I had gotten into in the previous years of production pottery. I hadn’t had an opportunity to talk much about my pottery with other artists, and the conversations were just as valuable as all the studio time, demonstrations and other activities.

 The workshop—since it was so far away from home, tucked into a beautiful, rural, snowy location during a quiet point in the year--felt like a rigorous creative retreat. Without the scholarship I wouldn’t have been able to attend, and it was such a deeply meaningful and inspiring journey.

 Since returning from the workshop, unfortunately I have not been able to spend much time at all in my studio because I got a full-time job at the university in the town I live.

 I’ve had a few stints in the studio, and since the workshop I have been inspired to work with red clay— something I have not done for years, as I got stuck on the porcelain bandwagon. It has been liberating to work with a much more earthy and groggy clay, and it has encouraged me to explore new bottle forms!

 I feel so fortunate to also still be in touch with my classmates from the workshop. One of the greatest gems of the experience was that another classmate took a teapot that I had made at the workshop (which I was not able to bring home) and fired it in her wood kiln. It felt like such a beautiful collaboration and I am so grateful for her generosity glazing my teapot and firing it in her kiln. 

 The workshop came at a very transitional time in my life— just about to turn 30, just about to become an aunt for the first time, just about to hear if I got a significantly career-boosting job (which I did.) I felt comfortable and encouraged to be open about these transitions during the class, and it was such a gift to use art as a means to explore uncertainty.

 Upon returning to Washington and hearing I got the job; I did have a small grain of sadness knowing I wouldn’t get to spend much time in the studio as I had hoped. I emailed my classmates with my update and feelings, and was reminded by a classmate: " you are truly a whole life artist- from farming to your ceramics, it is all a cohesive expression of your creative force, and I'm sure your work will just add another dimension to the creative work that is your life."

 By Ellie Duncan, 2023 recipient of Jackie Abrams Legacy Scholarship

Jessica Seaton

Jessica is a studio potter and ceramic artist who works in the Seacoast of New Hampshire making functional, handmade pottery for use in the home. Jessica thinks CLAY ROCKS!!!!

What if...?

It is time to thank all my fabulous teachers at North Country Studio Workshops: Bill Flynn, Bunny Harvey, Sigmund Abeles, Jerry Auten, Dorothy Caldwell and so so many others.

 I have been attending NCSW since…I don’t know when…2006.  And I have been a member of the Planning Committee or almost that long.

Although most of the work in my solo show, What if…?, now at the AVA Gallery in Lebanon, NH, was completed in the past year, their words of wisdom have echoed in my ears as I have worked.

 It has been quite an endeavor, but so worth it!  I am grateful to NCSW and to all those who shared their skills with me and encouraged me.

My exhibit, What if…? will be on display through July 14, 2023 at AVA Gallery in Lebanon, NH.

 Here is a link to AVA Gallery and Art Center

By Ann Saunderson, NCSW Planning Committee Member

Jessica Seaton

Jessica is a studio potter and ceramic artist who works in the Seacoast of New Hampshire making functional, handmade pottery for use in the home. Jessica thinks CLAY ROCKS!!!!

An Interview with Emma; Past Scholarship Recipient

2023 scholarship applications are now open and due on June 6, 2022.

At  North Country we value learning and community.  We are proud to make scholarships available to bring more people into our workshops and our community.  And we love to hear how North Country has influenced the work of our scholarship recipients …so we interviewed Emma Wimberley, our 2016 Young Artist Scholarship recipient.

Emma Wimberley lives in Chicago, Illinois. In addition to taking portrait and creative commissions, she is working at Ink Factory Studios and traveling the world to take Visual Notes for conferences and industry leaders. Thank you Emma for sharing your thoughts with us.

NCSW: How has your experience at NCSW influenced or enhanced your work?

Emma: Before NCSW, my drawing portfolio consisted of careful, hyper-realistic pencil drawings. My NCSW instructor, Bill Flynn, was the first person to challenge me to push my style. He encouraged me to step outside of my comfort zone, and get “messy” with my work. It felt like a tough shift , but by the end of the NCSW week my work had the movement and expression I  would not have found if I hadn’t been pushed in this workshop.

NCSW: Will you share something about your creative work? 

Emma: Since attending NCSW, I’ve learned that a drawing does not have to make sense to be good. Experimenting with overlapping drawings, multiple tools, and collage has transformed my work and made making art more exciting!

NCSW: Was there an “aha” moment when you knew art was something you wanted to explore, or was it a gradual evolution?

Emma: My father paints with oils, so I grew up loving and making art. I went to college at University of Wisconsin, Madison, where I graduated with a degree in Textile Design and have continued to enjoy various artistic pursuits.

NCSW: What are your preferred materials?  Preferred methods?

Emma: Lately I’ve preferred to experiment with different pens and pencils on paper, as well as some collage.  I often attend a weekly figure drawing class in Chicago which gives me the chance to  experiment with new materials and ways of drawing.

NCSW: What are your current goals for your artistic practice?

Emma: My goal is to keep my NCSW instructor Bill Flynn’s voice in my head as I create work. I want to continue to push myself to make more compelling work.

NCSW: Is there anything you would like to learn?  Work on?  Change?

Emma: I sometimes struggle with the idea before I start creating. I try to remember that the key is simply to get started, ideas will follow.

NCSW: Any words of encouragement for other “young artists” about NCSW?

I loved being able to walk around the scenic campus, listening to music and sketching. There was a feeling of community that reminded me of being on my own college campus - with groups of people gathered to drink wine and swap stories in the evenings. The quiet landscape offered an amazing chance to relax and creatively recharge over the week before returning to regular life. 

To people considering this experience – don’t hesitate! Apply for one of the many scholarships and make the time to do this. The week brings so much more than just a chance to really focus on what you do.   You learn and improve skills. You’ll meet people who are older and younger, working in different mediums, and every one of them will have something interesting to share and show you. North Country will inspire you and make your own work BETTER!

Jessica Seaton

Jessica is a studio potter and ceramic artist who works in the Seacoast of New Hampshire making functional, handmade pottery for use in the home. Jessica thinks CLAY ROCKS!!!!

Jackie’s Books

Many artists turn to books to feed their creativity. The books found in studios are the ones they hold dear. Jackie Abrams was no different.  NCSW is honored that Jackie signed and donated her books to support the new Jackie Abrams Legacy Scholarship, which has been established to honor her and her life as an artist and teacher, and founder of NCSW.

 Jackie, a masterful basketmaker and popular teacher, was very engaged with the creation of this scholarship and aligning it with the longstanding mission of NCSW - Inspiring the creativity and challenging the skill of accomplished craftspeople and artists.  We worked in partnership with Jackie, before she passed away on November 6, 2021, to ensure that the scholarship would be for a studio artist who has chosen to make their living through art/craft and/or teaching and who needs financial assistance in order to attend NCSW. Jackie was passionate about giving working artists the opportunity to expand their skills and ideas. 

 Jackie was also very committed to securing funds for this scholarship. She generously helped us promote the initial scholarship announcement last fall. It speaks volumes to her effort and her regard in the craft community that we have already raised over $11,000 and will be able to host our first Jackie Abrams Legacy Scholarship recipient at our next conference in January 2023.

 In addition, Jackie donated to NCSW part of her library of craft books for the purpose of raising further funds for the scholarship. She hand selected the books specifically for the NCSW community of craftspeople, artists, and supporters and personally signed each one. Kathy Hanson, NCSW PC member and friend of Jackie’s, worked closely on this project and shares:

 “This collection of books was a part of Jackie’s art studio. Each book in this personal library reflects her artistic journey.They were important to her as visual references to techniques and creative ideas and were thoughtfully chosen and donated to NCSW to raise money for her scholarship fund and to know they would find a good home in another artist’s studio. Working with this collection felt like I was having a conversation with Jackie about aesthetics that mattered to her.”

 We are now opening up the sale of Jackie’s books to the NCSW Community. Each book is being sold for $25 excluding shipping.  You can see a full catalog of books through this link.  To request a book, please email bookkeeper@ncsw.org with your name, email, and the title of the book(s) you would like to purchase. We will respond to requests on a first come, first served basis. Once we confirm if a book is still available, we will then send payment and shipping information.

 Additionally, we are still accepting general donations for the Jackie Abrams Legacy Scholarship. Our goal is to raise $25,000 through donations, book sales, and other fundraisers in order to secure the scholarship for many years to come. Donations can be made here.

 I’ll close with a huge thank you to the whole NCSW community for your generosity, support, and creativity. You are all such an important part of Jackie’s legacy and NCSW’s future. 

By Victoria Su, NCSW Executive Director

Jessica Seaton

Jessica is a studio potter and ceramic artist who works in the Seacoast of New Hampshire making functional, handmade pottery for use in the home. Jessica thinks CLAY ROCKS!!!!

Reflect~Reconnect~Recenter

Here I am in January 2022.  I should be wrapping up my liaison duties for North Country and preparing to go to  Bennington college, but we are still in this pandemic. I am thankful that we, the planning committee, and staff decided to postpone this session one more year.  My heart is missing Bennington, but it was the right decision to make.

This extra long break has renewed my gratitude for North Country Studio Workshop.  It has given me a chance to pause and reflect on why I value North Country so much.  It’s a pretty easy question to answer.

When I glance around my clay studio in the cold, dark month of January… 
I see remnants of ideas from past workshops, trades from other potters and artists including woodfired stoneware, soda fired surfaces, handmade brushes to decorate my work, my thrown and altered clay vessels. 
I see the layers and layers of experiences I have had at North Country
I see people who have become friends and confidants,
I see conversations,
I see late nights making in the studio after just learning an amazing new technique,
I see the faculty members who have influenced me so deeply with a conversation or advice 
I see my studio and an artist who has invested in herself at NCSW  to continue learning and being curious about expression, craft and community, 
I see layers and layers of ideas, community, conversation, a time that I have taken for myself to grow and develop my skills, to dive deep into technique,
I see space to make an energy that continues to fuel my curiosity.

I am thankful we will meet in 2023,  
I am thankful to be apart of the plans to continue and to evolve NCSW,
I am thankful I have layers and layers of ideas to continue to excavate, to reflect on that will keep me growing and inspired until the next workshop,
I am thankful for the North Country community who has persevered and has continued to work hard to maintainthe energy of North Country in this year.
I am thankful it will all carry me through until the 2023 session. This is the seventh session I have helped plan workshops as a Planning Committee member.

This year has begun in a reflective mood, but is quickly moving into thinking about our workshops, planning and talking with faculty members.  I have a feeling of relief to return, to reconnect, to recenter.  I’m looking forward to making and sharing in this next year knowing all the layers of inspiration to be unfolded.  Be well. Be creative. 

I am a studio potter and educator living in New Durham NH.  I am a functional wood fired and soda fired clay artist.  I love to collaborate with my atmospheric kilns.  I use clay slips to add layers of information for the kiln to react too.   

During my Covid years, I collaborated with a fellow potter, Andy Hampton, to build a wood fired kiln.  This was a great experience, which then brought together safely, some of the clay community to help fire this big kiln.  I have continued to experiment with clay forms and surface, influenced by my time at the workshops.

Please reach out if you have any questions 

Sarah Burns, NCSW Planning Committee Member
SweetFernPottery.com
Instagram: Sarah_sweetfernpottery
FB Sweet Fern Pottery

 

 

 

Jessica Seaton

Jessica is a studio potter and ceramic artist who works in the Seacoast of New Hampshire making functional, handmade pottery for use in the home. Jessica thinks CLAY ROCKS!!!!

Breathing Baskets and So Much More

While I had heard wonderful things about NCSW for years, the demands of my job had prevented me from attending workshops in the winter. Once retired, I immediately signed up for Pat Hickman’s 2020 Breathing Baskets class. I knew of Pat’s impressive body of work and I knew of many her international awards. Our studio assistant turned out to be Jackie Abrams, one of the founding members of North Country Studio Workshops and the one responsible for bringing Pat to NCSW. Jackie, being a much-celebrated basket maker in her own right, we had two women power houses in the studio.

Pat and Jackie were patient and kind, teaching twelve of us the intricate nuances of netting, fiber technique that appears very uniform with repetitive knotting or looping. One could assume that with just a few simple steps this might be an easy technique to master. I can assure you that looks can deceive and mistakes are often difficult to correct. In addition to teaching, each day Pat presented on her work and spoke on the vast history of netting. Additionally, she gave each participant a private review of their body of work. 

It took me the entire five days to catch on to netting. A fiber technique that I had never tried before but one that I have now added to my fiber skill sets.

Who could have guessed that soon after the last NCSW in February of 2020 the world as we had known it was about to change so dramatically. Covid19 was declared a pandemic in the United States in March and in April my brother contracted the virus while hospitalized for emergency surgery. 

Trying to absorb the reality of the world-wide pandemic and my brother’s dire situation, I began working on the sculpture “Covid19, We Are All in This Together.” This piece consists of 225 diagonally plaited cubes captured in a 12-foot knotted waxed linen net. 225 was the number of countries and territories that reported cases of the virus to the World Health Organization in April of 2020. Each cube is unique and the size relates to the population of the county or territory. 

Earlier this year “Covid19, We Are All in This Together” was entered into the National Basketry Organization’s virtual exhibition, Every 1. This work would not have been possible without my attending Pat’s workshop at NSCW.  I am happy to report that “Covid19, We Are All in This Together” won an Exhibition Committee Award from NBO.

The Breathing Basketry workshop was well beyond what I had imagined and my expectations were set pretty high. Thank you, Pat Hickman, Jackie Abrams and NCSW for all that you did to make the workshop a wonderful experience and in helping me learn a valuable fiber technique.

By Lynne Francis-Lunn, NCSW Planning Committee Member and Board Treasurer
You can find her on Instagram @lynnefl

Jessica Seaton

Jessica is a studio potter and ceramic artist who works in the Seacoast of New Hampshire making functional, handmade pottery for use in the home. Jessica thinks CLAY ROCKS!!!!

What I accomplished during early Covid lockdown

I encountered NCSW for the first time in 2019. I was following one of the instructors, and she mentioned teaching at the 2020 workshops. The class she was teaching was full, but another one looked just as interesting, so I signed up for a workshop in Embroidery on Unusual Surfaces with Unusual Materials taught by Jennifer Moss. 

The 2020 workshop happened a week into a 100 Day project I had signed up for, so I was making tiny embroidered pieces that were framed and photographed at the end of each day. I used the embroidery ideas I was getting from the workshop and elaborated on them in small repetitive ways. I took that practice home with me, to continue on with the 100 Day project and then March 2020 happened, and the world changed.

Needing the stability and routine, I kept going with the tiny embroideries, and when the first 100 days finished, I started another hundred, and a third hundred after that. It was hard to know how or when to stop? The pandemic was not over. I could keep going for a while yet. But when I said “I can stop any time” a good friend pointed out that was kind of a dangerous phrase, and another friend told me I was making him tired just following me – so the day after Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were inaugurated, I stopped. Exactly one leap year from starting, and in a completely changed emotional landscape. 

I have all 366 pieces mounted together on the wall over the table where we eat. It is a gratifying display of tenacity, and creativity, and I get a little thrill of delight when I stop to stare at it. 

 By Lee Thomson, NCSW Planning Committee Member and Board Member

www.leethomsonart.com

Jessica Seaton

Jessica is a studio potter and ceramic artist who works in the Seacoast of New Hampshire making functional, handmade pottery for use in the home. Jessica thinks CLAY ROCKS!!!!

When you are a maker

When you are a maker and creator all your life …but also have a career like science and education…you sometimes get swallowed up trying to solve problems and making things better. Your passion and creativity drive you forward with vision and commitment yet, your creative soul can get left behind. You might start creative projects, take a weekend to get into the flow…but Monday arrives, and you are left dreaming about it.  Your art lives inside your head, and you just can’t find the time to get back to it.

 In 1998, I was awarded the NH Christa McAuliffe Sabbatical and a dear friend told me to do something for myself. So, I did. That year, I went to art camp!  At first, I was all thumbs, and nothing seemed to flow. But at North Country, I discovered I wasn’t alone. There were incredible teachers and many happy campers sharing their ideas, skills, friendship, and sometimes even their tools!

 North Country provided the art fix I needed. It was like a mini vacation during the Vermont winter. I could unwind, dream out loud, and get into the arts I needed to explore. I recall the great artists that I learned with, and the wonderful friends who attended with me over the last two decades.  Bob Ebendorf and Linda Darty to Andy Cooperman, Harold O’Connor, Megan Corwin, and Nicole Ringgold; all assisted my love and experimentation with metal. Then I discovered metal wasn’t my only muse…because your creative soul gets intertwined with other media and artists during a North Country experience. Adrian Arleo, Michael Sherrill, and Lana Wilson all contributed to my love of ceramics, Leonard Ragouzeos, Daniel Essig, and Erin Sweeney injected paper, ink, and bookmaking. All of this contributes to a very full life, and of course my ADHD! But I am so happy when I am making!

After a decade, I started to serve with the Planning Board to give thanks and help solidify North Country for future generations. As I recently retired to just part-time work in science education, I find that all the experiences at North Country have shaped me as a mid-career artist. My work in metal shows a little bit of everyone…but it is starting to be just me! My experiences were integral to being awarded an apprenticeship with Jayne Redman in Maine (2020), which gave me a year to focus and define my direction as an artist. My studio is getting more organized as projects still dancing in my head are finished and escorted to new owners. I can see how clay has helped me to understand 3D shape and to seek volume from flat sheets of metal. I sketch almost daily and find that line and paint helps me to imagine new forms. I continue to learn, experiment with new materials, and most of all play! But it is my North Country learning, friends, teachers, and experiences that push me forward with confidence to grow and become. Thank you!

 By Barbara Hopkins, NCSW Planning Committee Member 

 www.bahopkins.com

Jessica Seaton

Jessica is a studio potter and ceramic artist who works in the Seacoast of New Hampshire making functional, handmade pottery for use in the home. Jessica thinks CLAY ROCKS!!!!

Creativity, Intuition & Self Discovery

I have been NCSW’s registrar from its earliest days. As a professional potter, I was so grateful for the chance to engage with other potters and to learn from the amazing clay professionals that NCSW brought to the Northeast, that when the position opened, I offered to contribute my database skills.

In 1993, I founded and ran Vermont Clay Studio, an educational center with a ceramics exhibition gallery which had exciting monthly shows of the work of artists from around the U.S. But after 9 years as Executive Director and a total hip replacement, I reluctantly moved away from the crafts world to follow new personal and professional interests, and a strong desire to help cultivate consciousness, creativity & compassion.

I had a deep awakening experience while doing dream therapy and was moved to share my new insights through teaching. So I began to offer clay classes on “creating from the unconscious” … an attempt to foster technical and personal growth in others and myself. It was exciting, and impactful for my students, to explore using creativity as a tool for self-development.

Then I was introduced, by a community of Vermont Sufis, to the Enneagram—a profound personality system and tool for self-awareness, that was amazingly accurate and practical. I decided to study it, and trained for 6 years, and became an expert, certified to teach and coach using the Enneagram (for more info: enneagraminstitute.com).

Besides the Enneagram work, my creativity and intuition now find expression through the Soul Collage® process (official site: soulcollage.com). This is an expressive arts practice done individually or in community; it works with the language of symbols, dreams, and archetypes. It encourages self-discovery, and provides a way to do personal inquiry as a means to access inner guidance. Basically the cards form a deck with four suits, focused on aspects of one’s inner and outer life. So, for instance, you identify one of the many inner parts of yourself (like “Inner Observer,” or “The Bitch,” or “The Gardener,” or “The Perfectionist”)--or you identify an archetype that is arising in your life (like the Creator, Light Bearer, Healer, etc.)--that you want to get to know better. Then you create a 5” x 8” collage on poster board stock; these become your own personal tarot deck. The images are powerful sources that carry lots of metaphorical wisdom that one can consult when one wants to—like if you’re at a crossroads in life, or have a decision to make, etc.

I have a BFA in ceramics from Mass. College of Art in Boston; I trained as a painter before moving to ceramics. 3D is my “home” but I love the visual arts, too, and thoroughly enjoy collaging right now. During my life, I have used clay, paint, wood, words, and collage to put form to experience, to explore and keep my imagination alive. I believe creativity—the possibility and solutions it finds—is necessary more than ever in our time.

Here is a sampling of six of my cards: Out of the Frame; Mom (deceased); 4th Chakra, Gorilla Wisdom; Light Bearer; Authenticity; The Gardner. 

By Jeanne Haskell, NCSW Registrar

Jessica Seaton

Jessica is a studio potter and ceramic artist who works in the Seacoast of New Hampshire making functional, handmade pottery for use in the home. Jessica thinks CLAY ROCKS!!!!