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Public
clay firing ends two-week ceramic workshop
Ceramics artist Nina Hole invented a way to build a kiln into her
clay structures.
By
Greg Corradini, photos by Laura Destano
from Minnesota Daily
October 8, 2004
A
four-ton clay sculpture burst into flames behind the Regis Center
for Art on Thursday evening. Part performance art and part spectacle,
the public clay firing was the culmination of a two-week workshop
led by Danish ceramics artist Nina Hole. The University, Northern
Clay Center and the Mid America College Art Association sponsored
the event.
Approximately
200 spectators attended the event. Interpretations of the ritual
leapt into the air along with the flames. Danish
artist Nina Holes 12-foot tall self-firing ceramic sculpture
burned bright during an on-site public firing at the Regis Center
for Art on Thursday.
It looks like a burning skyscraper, said Charles Tommerdahl,
a junior at the University of Wisconsin - River Falls, who came
all the way to Minneapolis for the event.
Nine
participants, some from as far away as England, came to Minneapolis
to help build the sculpture and learn more about Holes sculpting
techniques.
Its
always amazing to work with someone who has a vision like this from
the start, said Jo Willemsen, a participant from Mason City,
Iowa.
Hole
said that American Indian headdresses, farm silos and transformer
houses influenced her creative vision for the red-and-white sculpture.
I
try to make the strongest statement possible, she said. Very
simple color patterns and form are what I aim for. Although
her past ceramic artwork varies in size and theme, Hole began making
larger site-specific sculptures in the early 1990s, she said.
Hole
said she innovated the sculpture building process when she invented
a way to build a kiln into her clay structures, allowing her to
fire them on site. It
is so impractical to bring (parts of the sculpture) inside to the
kiln to fire them. The idea of making a sculpture and a kiln as
one in the same is very logical, she said.
Nick
Batchelder, a local bricklayer who attended the event, said he learned
about the public firing last week when he walked past the artists
building the structure. Batchelder
said that although he has seen some brick sculptures and plans on
making some of his own, hes never seen anything like Holes
sculptures.
The
temperature of the self-firing sculpture rose to 2,192 degrees before
the insulating blankets were removed.
Steve
Rife, a local fire artist, said he came to the event to get a glimpse
of Holes brand of fire work. She
definitely has a grasp on her materials, fire and time, and is a
master of ceramic alchemy, Rife said, This is a new
one for me.
Although
Hole was once a painter, she said, she was never able to shake the
conviction that her destiny lies in mud. I
am one of those people who have always known what they wanted to
do, Hole said. Clay was my stuff.
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