Long night in the studio.
Got back a dozen whiskey cups, the fourth pita plate, a set or two of rock blocks, the remainder of my sets of houses, and my really big box from the soda kiln (photos soon!). Everything looks nice; the box is exceptionally cool. Fifteen or twenty whiskey cups and two smaller boxes that I posted here came out of bisque, as well as a few more pita plates. And I made these!

I’m really excited about these new sets. The details are wonderful. The way the wall joint is articulated, how the wall meets the bottom. I made little wood signature stamps; the cups deserve it. These are for the wood+salt firing at the end of the month.
Idea: Houses
I posted a photo at the bottom of this post showing a few houses stacked up. At the time, I idly wondered how it would be to fire them in a stack like that. After seeing a photo in a ceramics book, where a wall was created out of extruded (teacup) forms, I’m definitely ready to give the house-stack a shot. It also reminds me of Tejo Remy’s use of drawers.
New Work: Boxes
At the beginning of August, I got a bunch of work back from bisque. I’d stacked up a couple dozen whiskey cups inside a pretty big (20″ long, 3″ wide, 8″ high, or so) clay box, set it to get fired. It was so exciting to have a box of work, rather than a handful, that I decided to make boxes to put some of the cups in. It’s pretty darn exciting. Look for some finished results soon!
Houses: a Brief History

I began making houses on the first day of a new job, my first in residential architecture. The home is more than shelter; it’s a safe haven. With this in mind, I made a few, marking various personal events.

This house is stamped with the words, “I hope everything is okay”, and appears to be on the verge of collapse. I built it around that phrase, out of too-thin clay; the edge ripped, the walls tried to collapse so I braced them with wet clay; one brace fell out and the other two stayed. Cobalt seemed the obvious choice for something so dramatic. Great results.
Within a couple of months I’d realized the limits of a typical 25′x125′ Chicago lot; in plan, every house begins to look the same.

The Future
After making a few groups with that in mind, I started wanting a horde of houses, enough to cover my living room floor, or more. I don’t know whether I’ll ever do a living room installation, but I would like to do one, someplace. The architect in me wants to see a room where they’re on the floor, where people walk on a raised path, where the field of houses is raised, to experiment with different viewing perspectives. Contact me if you’re interested in hosting such an installation!
The napkin holder house (first photo this post) made me a minor (very minor) celebrity at NSUC Art 2007, as it was featured on the show’s postcard. The groups were a hit, something I hadn’t anticipated. It’s nice that they’re so dear to others, even as sending houses to new homes moves me farther from realizing my installation. I enjoy making them, enjoy the attentiveness to an object so seemingly simple.
I’ve kept a few for myself; the two at work tend to house business cards, one at home is a napkin holder, others are purely decorative. Despite the sculptural intention, I can’t seem to stop stashing important little bits and pieces in them: the defining difference between condo/apartment and house seems to be the capacity for storage.
Idea: Architecture and Clay
I’m interested in transferring my hand-drawn detail sketches to clay, somehow, as a tangible expression of the juxtaposition of life and art.
Although CAD is the primary method of producing architectural drawings today, I frequently work out details by hand – something about that process enables me to think in a way that mouse-in-hand doesn’t.
At work, I’m moving toward the end of wrapping up a big set of drawings for the boathouse at the Great Lakes Naval Base. It’s a masonry restoration and interior reconsideration of a fine 1904 building. In the process, I’ve learned an incredible amount about masonry and roofing.
It seems worthwhile to pursue.