Get your FREE SUBSCRIPTION to Ceramics Arts Daily today!
Enter Your Email Address
 
7greatprojects.gif







Close Window
Subscribe to Ceramic Arts Daily and we'll give you
2008 Ceramic Workshop Handbook 
FREE!
Enter Your Email Address
 

7 Great Pottery ProjectsEnter your email address to get a Free Charter Subscription to Ceramic Arts Daily, an email newsletter for people who are passionate about clay.


printer friendly version Send to a friend Bookmark this page Bookmark this feature printer friendly version Print this feature share your comments Share your comments

View Larger Image

“Hope,” 18 in. (46 cm) in height, thrown stoneware, with slips.

December 3, 2007

Pots, People, Places: The Relationships of Dennis Maust

by Chad Martin | Read Comments (0)

Ask Dennis Maust about his pots and he will likely respond with stories about people and places; he might tell you about Spain, Tanzania, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Peru or Egypt. And he would talk about friends, “enemies,” neighbors and uncles. After hearing such stories, I have quickly learned to know Maust as a ceramics artist whose aesthetic sensibilities derive more from the variety of international locales where he has lived and traveled than from trends in North American ceramics.

INSPIRATION
His inspiration comes as much from conversations with humble potters around the globe working to eek out a living from their craft, as from the art world of Western culture. This unusual range of experiences and influences has motivated Maust to develop a palette of ceramic techniques that results in work centering on two key characteristics. He attends to aesthetic detail, showing a love for compelling juxtapositions—complimentary colors against each other; deteriorated surfaces against polished finishes; simple forms against layered textures; natural materials against manufactured objects—and always intends to reveal beauty.

120307Maust2_CAPTION.jpgANTIQUING
Throughout the last couple of decades, Maust’s work combines forms, textures and colors that embody his travels. He employs skillfully thrown forms, intricate carvings and manipulated slips he calls “antiquing.” The resulting pots are a study in design as well as a celebration of his memory of architectural forms and images of nature. While the style and substance of this work comes largely from his travels, Maust’s M.F.A. from the Rochester Institute of Technology shows through in his attention to detail and his willingness to experiment with techniques to achieve a desired end.

EXPLORING HUMAN, POLITICAL RELATIONSHIPS
Maust has been creating such technically and aesthetically developed work for years, but only recently has he begun exploring the nature of human and political relationships with this work. With a series of pieces created in 2004, he took a deliberately conceptual turn. Maust’s frustration with the war in Iraq and his critique of U.S. foreign policy throughout the Middle East spurred him on. He started making forms that were aesthetically similar to his previous work, but he added provocative titles, Arabic script and a bit of performance art to his palette of techniques. He explains, “Before, I was responding to visual stimuli—divorced from my view of rightness or wrongness. No one had described my work as powerful before.” He continues to wrestle with complex questions as he makes pots. “I’ve heard from many people about how this work has moved them. It felt good and is motivating me to continue.”

printer friendly version Send to a friend Bookmark this page Bookmark this feature printer friendly version Print this feature share your comments Share your comments

Read more about these related topics:
Glazing Techniques & Glaze Recipes Handbuilding Ceramic Sculpture Ceramic Artists