Masterclass | Walter Keeler | Making Jugs Part 2

Walter Keeler

Watch British artist Walter Keeler as he finishes making one of his signature, monumental jugs. We listen as Keeler talks us through the various processes, providing us with an invaluable insight into his philosophy towards clay and making. He shows us some of his ‘special’ tools and ‘hacks’ that he has discovered over his 60 years as a potter.

Extruded forms are synonymous with Keeler’s work. In particular the strong sweeping forms of the jugs, with spouts an integral part of the body, rather than being added later. The forms are made by pushing the clay through a die of the desired size and shape using a wall mounted extruder.

Keeler is a British studio potter, born in London in 1942. He attended Harrow School of Art, London where he was trained by Michael Casson. He established his first pottery at Bledlow Bridge, Buckinghamshire in 1965 then moved to his current studio in Penallt Wales, where he lives with his potter wife Madoline. He was professor of Ceramics at the University of the West of England and in 2007 was named Welsh Artist of the Year.

Keeler makes salt glaze pottery influenced by early Staffordshire Creamware. Writer Oliver Watson described him as ‘one of the most important and influential potters of the 1980s’. Keeler’s work is held in a number of public collections including Victoria & Albert Museum, National Museum Wales, American Craft Museum, New York, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, USA and the Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo.

Masterclass | Walter Keeler | Making Jugs Part 1

masterclass walter keeler making jugs part 1 slate jpg webp Masterclass | Walter Keeler | Making Jugs Part 1 jug

Watch British artist Walter Keeler as he begins to make one of his signature, monumental jugs. We listen as Keeler talks us through the various processes, providing us with an invaluable insight into his philosophy towards clay and making. He shows us some of his ‘special’ tools and ‘hacks’ that he has discovered over his 60 years as a potter.

Extruded forms are synonymous with Keeler’s work. In particular the strong sweeping forms of the jugs, with spouts an integral part of the body, rather than being added later. The forms are made by pushing the clay through a die of the desired size and shape using a wall mounted extruder.

Keeler is a British studio potter, born in London in 1942. He attended Harrow School of Art, London where he was trained by Michael Casson. He established his first pottery at Bledlow Bridge, Buckinghamshire in 1965 then moved to his current studio in Penallt Wales, where he lives with his potter wife Madoline. He was professor of Ceramics at the University of the West of England and in 2007 was named Welsh Artist of the Year.

Keeler makes salt glaze pottery influenced by early Staffordshire Creamware. Writer Oliver Watson described him as ‘one of the most important and influential potters of the 1980s’. Keeler’s work is held in a number of public collections including Victoria & Albert Museum, National Museum Wales, American Craft Museum, New York, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, USA and the Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo.

Exhibition | Jean-Nicolas Gérard

exhibition jean nicolas gerard jpg webp Exhibition | Jean-Nicolas Gérard jug

An opportunity to enjoy an extensive walk around French slipware master, Jean-Nicolas Gérard’s 2020 Goldmark exhibition. Max Waterhouse introduces us to Gérard’s new range of white ware and talks us through a variety of very individual, whimsical forms and expressive, animated decorative techniques.

Exhibition | Phil Rogers | Earthly Matters

phil rogers ex jpg webp Exhibition | Phil Rogers | Earthly Matters jug

Phil Rogers, one of the outstanding British potters of his generation, exhibited at Goldmark Gallery from 16 May 2020. This was the 5th major exhibition of his work at Goldmark and each show has built on the success of the one before. Goldmark was closed because of the Coronavirus however the exhibition was available virtually to the public with an online tour and new films featuring both an interview with Rogers and footage of him at work. The exhibition saw the publication of a new catalogue written by the Rev. Richard Coles, Vicar of Finedon, former member of 1980s pop group The Communards and presenter of Radio 4 programme Saturday Live. The film shows the culmination of an extraordinary career in ceramics by a potter who forged his own path pushing the boundaries of the traditions he was rooted in.

Talking Pots | Svend Bayer | Pitchers or Jugs

Screenshot 2018 07 03 10.37.40 jpg webp Talking Pots | Svend Bayer | Pitchers or Jugs jug

Svend Bayer talks about the most important shape he makes, the pitcher or jug. Heavily influenced by Michael Cardew’s North Devonshire pitchers, Bayer talks about the necessity for the shape of the handle to follow that which the hand makes when it picks up a pitcher. He also talks briefly about celadon glaze and wood firing.