CCC Artist Naomi Stein Cooper

Naomi Stein Cooper


“I see beauty everywhere,” states Naomi Stein Cooper from her new studio in a 1972 Airstream Land Yacht. This is her first time in the California Clay Competition and simultaneously juried into Focus on Ceramics 2020 at the Davis Art Center ACGA Show. 

 

Currently, Naomi is developing a series of sculptural shamans, incorporating human, animal and plant imagery, referring to the idea that humans have innate connections and communication with spirits, animals, the dead, God, the future and past. These connections can be used to heal, and lift up others. Similar to the ideas revealed to artists communicating with their Muse. This series is the first time she is sculpting the human face as a means to connect more with her audience. 



Naomi uses several different types of Cone 5-6 clay bodies employing hand building, slab and coil building techniques. Texture is especially important and she experiments with multiple finishes including underglaze, commercial glazes and multiple firings to get the effects she wants. “The bolder I am, the more I learn about how far I can push the material, every time gaining more techniques to get more variegated, visually interesting pieces.” 

 

Naomi is on a roller derby team called the Carquinez Quad Squad and has kids in elementary school. Since the pandemic quarantine, her balance has been thrown off. Kids are at home and her exercise practice has been reduced. As for the artwork, there is less time. “But one thing I love about clay is how it needs attention, how the timing is important, which demands that I return to the studio to finish what I started.” 


 

Unfortunately, Naomi had a solo show at the McCune Rare Book and Art Collection in Vallejo which opened on March 13 and closed on March 16 due to Covid-19. So to see more of her work check out her website: www.naomisteincooper.comwww.instagram.com/naomisteincooper/ and www.facebook.com/naomisteincooperartwork

CCC Artist Kathy Pallie

Kathy Pallie

 

After a career in commercial art, Kathy Pallie, this week’s CCC artist, rediscovered the tactile allure of clay. “I need to have my hands manipulating clay”. The tactile sense is always in play, whether she is creating a realistic trompe l’oeil effect or zeroing in on one of the many nuances of tree bark through a macro lens. 

 

Nature is Kathy’s biggest inspiration with its vast palette of colors, textures and patterns. She uses tools like pieces of bark, tree nuts, springs, and twigs. With the idea of the way nature grows vertically from the earth, reaching for the sun, so working in clay brings to life Kathy’s passion to communicate her ideas in clay from the ground up.  Observing the detail of nature opens a world of exciting abstract graphic designs and forms. 

 


Kathy uses a variety of clay bodies in slabs, coils and extruded shapes. She doesn’t use the clay as a canvas to paint or glaze but loves to work the surface and allow a 3-dimensional form to take form. The scope of her work ranges from small 3” diameter coil baskets to architectural installations such as Out of the Woods created for the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Lake Tahoe. From her home studio, Kathy works around family needs, and keeping active: hiking, skiing, swimming and staying shape.

 

“I’m always inspired by what is going on around me, nature, political situations and emotions. I start with a concept and figure out how to execute it. It’s always a journey and that’s exciting.”

 

Since the Covid-19 crisis Kathy has had 3 shows cancelled or postponed. California

Clay Competition at the Artery Gallery in Davis where my piece “Ebony Landscape Trio”can be

viewed on the website https://theartery.net/ccc2020; Art Works Downtown gallery in San

Rafael, CA, in the “100 Years of Freedom” exhibition, my two pieces “Tied Up in Knots - Fake

News” - no clay involved, and “ Dialogue Dispels Differences “ with is fiber and clay tiles

imprinted with lace; and Epperson Gallery in Crockett, CA, a 4-person show “Into the

Woods” (postponed, no new date) where I will be showing a body of 17 pieces of clay work, all

nature and tree related.

 

You can see more of Kathy Pallie’s work here: www.kathypallieart.com or on Facebook KathyPallieArt. 



CCC Artist Linda Litteral

Linda Litteral

 

“Art has been the avenue for healing for me, from the beginning.” states Linda Litteral, this week’s CCC artist. Linda took her first art class in clay when she was 33 and graduated with an MFA from San Diego State University when she was 49. “Art is a powerful medium for saying things that cannot be said verbally. It takes the trauma out of your body and lessens the power it has over you.” 



 

When Linda moved to Charleston, SC with her husband in 1988, she was working in manufacturing as a tooling and product designer. She was told, ”We do not hire women here” time and again. So she began taking classes at Duke’s School of Clay and Fine Art and fell in love with the medium. 

 

Passionate about women’s issues and specifically sexual abuse, Linda uses her art to make political commentary. She also teaches, using art as a healing modality at Donovan State Prison and at Las Colinas Detention Facility for women, where 80% of the population has been sexually abused at some time in their lives. “I find it inspiring to help others, and expose inequities in a world that seems to be warring against women.”



 

Currently Linda is working on a series of carvings around a spiral design. A repeated motif found in Linda’s work, the spiral, represents her path to recovery from childhood sexual abuse. Carving porcelain comes naturally and with flow,  and it is where she works out her ideas for sculpture. The meditative process gives her mind space.  She also throws and carves bowls, labeling them “possibility bowls” where your hopes and dreams can be held in a safe place. She likes the surprise’s in soda firings for glazes. For larger sculpture she uses coils and can work on a single piece for a couple weeks or more depending on complexity. Linda enjoys technical challenges and different media. Ultimately, the work is more about the idea than the material. 

 

Linda is the Co-director of the Feminists Image Group(FIG) a professional women’s artist group that shows together. She has curated a show at City College in San Diego called “Don’t Shut Up” which is her mantra around sexual abuse. She also has had a residency at Centre Pompadour, A laboratory for Neo-Feminism in France and two shows in Sweden, Feminism Now, at Grafiska Sallskapet Gallery, and Betrayed at  Krogen  Amerika Gallery. She is currently showing Linda Litteral: A Solo Show, at Sparks Gallery in San Diego and Flourish, at Klamath Art Gallery in Klamath Falls, Oregon. 

To see more of Linda’s work find her at www.lindalitteral.com or www.healingartprocess.com, on Facebook: Linda Literal Artist and on Instagram @lindalitteralartist



CCC Artist Interview with Emil Yanos.





Emil Yanos

 

This week’s CCC Artist, Emil Yanos is a professionally trained floral and graphic designer who has been working in clay since 1993. His ceramic work weaves together the best aspects of both disciplines. Nature has been the main inspiration and Yanos loves plants, seeds, pods, shells and geology for his artform.


Yanos uses some sketching to work out proportion but then allows for an organic growth when starting to build. Using Sculpture Mix 412, he builds with slabs rolled and rested for a day. A lot of times the condition of the clay, (wet or dry) will dictate the form. Once the work is at a certain firmness, he adds texture. Yanos prefers engobes and underglazes because of the dry matte finish. “This, for me, is the most time-consuming part because of the multiple layers of color.”

 

Yanos came to clay by accident, after being laid off during the recession in the 90’s. He was looking for work and trying to start his own business and came across Ruby’s Clay Studio while walking around his neighborhood. He has been there ever since. However, with the pandemic, the studio is closed. With only a few totems he had taken home to repair, he has started watching painting videos and has turned to trying out some acrylic painting. 

 

Yanos has had some interesting commissions, has been featured on the cover of American Artwork and in 2014 was a Wildcard Finalist for the Martha Stuart American Made Award in craft, ceramics, potter and glass category. 

 

You can see more of Emil Yanos’s work at www.emilyanosdesign.com and on Instagram/Facebook @emilyanosdesign.



CCC Artist Interview with Sue DeWulf

Sue DeWulf

 

“My ceramics illustrate my childhood fascination with toys and play. Creating scenarios for my dolls filled my summer days. I remember discovering my grandmother’s toy basket full of zoo animals and carefully lining them up along her porch while rearranging and juxtaposing them. So, in a sense, while I sculpt, I am a child lost in a fantasy world of play.“  states Sue De Wulf, this week’s CCC artist.



 

Each piece is a whimsical adventure, inspired by the way the toys can be balanced, and manipulated into an overall theme. De Wulf uses a variety of unique cast toys and molds using low fire earthenware slip and clay. She will spend a whole day casting 30-40 pieces, returning the next day to uncover the toy basket of clay pieces like a return to her grandmother’s porch and a basketful of toys, to begin the play of assemblage.  Many of her these are from childhood memories or the feeling of play and De Wulf enjoys watching and listening to viewers recall childhood memories from her imagery. 

 

De Wulf has been a middle school art teacher for over twenty years and returned to her ceramics three years ago. Balancing working full time and creating art is challenging. Often she needs to block off a weekend to just be in the studio as distractions of daily life can fill up a day. 

 

De Wulf has been participating in a few shows and will be showing in Made in California at the La Brea Gallery when it opens again. In the meantime, she misses her students. You can see  more of her work at: www.dewulfceramics.com  and on Instagram@dewulfceramics. 



CCC Interview with Tebby George


Tebby George

Intertwined with the figurative community of sculptors, models, students and instructors in the Bay Area, Tebby George, this week’s CCC artist, has shared the joy of working in clay for years as a Life Sculpture teacher at Fort Mason through City College of San Francisco.  Teaching has a reciprocal affect, interweaving her work life with her creative life. “Ideas born in my studio contribute to the classroom and ideas born in the classroom contribute to my art.” 
Tebby also keeps developing as a figurative artist by working weekly with a live model in a small group. (In fact, Tebby was my first life sculpture teacher and I have sculpted with her off and on for years.)

Using several types of clay, from smooth porcelain mixes to clays with heavy grog, Tebby likes mixing textures and clays, often combining terra sigillata on smooth clay and mason stains on rough clay in the same piece. For quick studies she enjoys the unpredictability of Raku. Her favorite part is seeing the subject emerge from the clay, sometimes with ease and sometimes after a struggle She works on several pieces at a time. Right now, she has a large portrait with a challenging pattern on a billowing scarf wrapping the neck and shoulders, and a figure of an angel going, plus, underglazing finishes on several fired pieces. 

“I am moved to express in clay, the absolute beauty I see in the diversity of the Bay Area—the deep rich colors and forms surrounding me in the people I encounter every day. Being present in the elegance and force of the natural work in this area, the ocean, the rolling hills, the tall trees--frees me from the demands of the mundane and enables a space for creativity.”

Showing around the Bay Area: Vallejo Art Windows Installation, From Many Shores, a solo show at Throckmorton Main Theater Gallery, Face Time:Portrait of Marin County at the Civic Center Galleris in Marin, and Ceramic Sensibilities, Artworks Downtown 1337 Gallery, in San Rafael are a few shows she has participated in. But since the pandemic, she has been doing an online Open Studio, connecting with people who collect her work.



“When life is especially rocky, I depend on the comfort of the clay and tend to spend more time than usual in my studio. This keeps me healthy and somewhat sane, along with walking in nature, swimming and a meditation practice. “

Make sure to check out Tebby’s beautiful work and Open Studio at: www.tebbygeorge.com and on Facebook/tebbygeorge. 

CCC Interview with Bill Heiderich

Bill Heiderich


Bill Heiderich, our CCC artist this week, is a veteran to this competition. His animated forms challenge the boundaries of function and utility and tend to be formal design studies “I attempt to capture a nostalgic feel.”


Heiderich is a builder who has built his last two homes, made furniture, cast bronze and fabricated steel. He has always been fascinated by creating objects. His initial interest in clay started in an eighth-grade summer school class and was supported later in high school by a fantastic teacher Phil Niederhoff. He continued his education at San Jose State University where he got a Bachelors in Art and an MFA in Plastic Arts. 

Most of his current work is focused on geometric constructions using low fire clay and glazes fired in an electric kiln.  “Almost all of my work is hand built. My favorite part is fabricating elements for a piece. The worst part is when the piece fails and I cannot save it.” Heiderich generally works in a series and has several pieces going at one time. 


Heiderich taught ceramics, 3-D design and sculpture for 40 years and developed his work out of the interaction with students. Now that he’s retired he finds it much easier to find the time to play with clay. He has an extensive exhibition record and tries to elevate his good work to very good work. His website is down right now, so enjoy these fabulous works here!