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Who knew all this would happen afterwards! Welcome to my little town.

Saturday, May 3, 2025

Saturday's Critters in clay

I've been searching for some animals (and there once were quite a few) which I made either in the shape of animals (think cats or dragons) or as glazing detail on a functional piece.

Hummingbird plate (about 7 inches if I remember correctly.)


Simple trivets, or decorations (flat ceramic pieces that could protect a wood table from a hot dish.

Free standing cat mask




There were two times in my life that I created art forms (or humorous forms, as some may say) of clay. First was in the 1980s when I returned to college to work on a BFA degree at the U of Florida in Ceramics. I just have a few of those pieces left, and maybe a dozen photos. As I've moved about through the years, I've tossed many "artsy pieces" out.


Bee tea-set in celadon and dark green glazes, 2014

Then I again got a chance to work in clay after I retired from being an Activity Director for senior apartment residents.

Hummingbird vase


I made things in clay for 12 years after retirement, in my mid 60s till my 70s, My last efforts were a few months of work in my 81st year on dragons. My health now precludes me working in clay where dust and mold would interfere with my lungs.



Dragon girl one as a bisque level, waiting for glaze which didn't come out well, so I tossed this.



Monarch mug which I still have for morning coffee.



Blue bird of happiness


A silly little calico, these are altered forms after throwing "on the hump" of a bigger piece of clay on the wheel. 



Dragon tower - all slab built.





Cat and mouse teapot



OK, there are more, and now I want to make an album of them. So am off to see where photos have been stored for years of the giraffes, the hummingbird mask, the other bee teapot, the blue bird bowl, and others that I will be pleasantly surprised to find. I've got an entire external hard drive to plug in and search.

Yes, all of these are my work, from start to finish. I have a couple of them still.

Many pots were tossed away. My approach to clay creations is that "Everything is sacred. Nothing is sacred."


Sharing with Eileen's Saturday's Critters



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Current events from H.C. Richardson: At 101 days, the “Department of Government Efficiency” and its leader, billionaire Elon Musk, are also running into trouble. Musk vowed to slash $2 trillion from government spending, but that number kept dropping until he said DOGE will save about $150 billion. As David A. Fahrenthold and Jeremy Singer-Vine noted in the New York Times, that number is largely unsubstantiated. The DOGE team’s list of cuts is riddled with errors. In addition, the nonpartisan nonprofit Partnership for Public Service estimates that DOGE cuts have actually cost taxpayers $135 billion this fiscal year, not including lawsuits.

AND - from pagan leader, permaculture teacher, and Jew, Starhawk:

The Freedom Flotilla boat is attempting to bring humanitarian aid to Gaza, where the Israeli government has stopped all shipments of food and medical supplies since late March. Food programs have run out of supplies, and mass famine is threatening. Depriving a civilian population of food and medical aid violates international law and all basic human morality. In the face of this emergency, brave human rights have set sail to attempt to bring in needed aid. But tonight their ship was bombed in international waters outside Malta, and is now in danger of sinking. Please contact the Maltese government and demand that they send help. 30 people are on board!

Here's an easy way to send a message:
https://support.adc.org/a/malta

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Today's quote:

Be joyful, though you have considered all the facts.

Wendell Berry

 



21 comments:

  1. Thank you for the gallery of your work. It's so good to learn more about your clay life.

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    1. I just decided to add my ceramic efforts to this blog. Glad to have positive feedback, but that's not why I'm doing it. It's like showing my old photos for me.

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  2. Replies
    1. Well, the only way I am creative these days is here on blogs.

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  3. You were a very accomplished potter. I guess you still are but just can't do it now.

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    1. Interesting description of my times and skills...but I think I'm happy to have spent as much of my life as I did making things in clay.

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  4. Hello Barb,
    Happy May to you! Your pottery is lovely, I see many favorite items. The bee tea set is a favorite. I love anything with a hummingbird. Thank you for linking up and sharing your critter post. Take care, have a great weekend.

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    1. It is always a pleasure to share on Saturday's Critters, as well as to read your comments here almost every time I post!

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  5. Creating in clay for so many years must have been incredibly rewarding.

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    1. I think I met my goals with clay work...to relax and feel creative, to release my hopes into mud and chemicals and the firing process, and to sometimes be disappointed but more often satisfied.

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  6. When you say you threw out some of your work, does that mean into the trash or on to another home? I hope it was the latter so others could enjoy some lovely art.

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    1. If a piece (usually sculpture) later looked to me as if it was out of proportion, or the glaze failed, it was first given a few hits of a hammer (or whatever hard device I could find) and then the pieces tossed to the garbage. Many of my works were sold at the Tailgate Market each Saturday here in Black Mountain. And a few were given to friends and relatives.

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  7. Hi Barbara, Sorry you can do pottery any longer. Aging seems to impact us all doesn't it! I can't play golf, walk up even slight hills easily...and with my balance, I've also given up fishing.
    My mother made some pottery in her lifelong artistic journey. We just passed a small bust of my maternal grandmother on to a cousin who remembers her. I have a set of pottery based chess pieces that my mother created too. They will go to our son. Take Care, Big Daddy Dave

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    1. While I tried to breathe in 6500 feet of elevation (being used to 2500 feet) I also still had lingering effects from recent pneumonia on my trip to Colorado...my phone gave me a health warning. It said my gait was unsteady and I was at risk for a fall within 12 months. Really! I had no idea my phone kept track of my gait! But I was glad to come back to home level. I also use a walking stick often. So glad you're not fishing and letting the big catch pull you along with it through the water! Oh that's great to have a whole chess set in ceramics...a difficult task! And I love hearing how cherished pieces will be passed along through generations. My family has all but told me to not give them any more pottery! (Seriously, they don't have room for any more)

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  8. I had to smiled when you ended this with "Everything is sacred. Nothing is sacred." My husband used to rescue what I had made, and at some point thrown out. He eventually gave up. I do love your cat and mouse teapot.

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    1. Thanks, I got a kick out of that teapot too. I still have some well-loved pieces that need to be discarded...the problem with 12 years of making is having many more than I should have at this stage of life!

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  9. Love your critter art pieces. They are very creative and beautiful.

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    1. Thank you very much. I'll keep on showing some ceramics out of my huge inventory of photos - until people start saying "enough!" Or maybe just stop saying they like them.

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  10. What delightful pieces, quite whimsical but very appealing.

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    1. Thanks. Though I tried to be somewhat realistic, I tend to go into a kind of childish mode in simplifying my works.

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  11. Your critter pieces are delightful! It’s too bad the dragon girl did not work out.

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There is today, more than ever, the need for a compassionate regenerative world civilization.