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BAY AREA EMERGING ARTIST JUST
KEEPS GETTING LARGER
Jane Burton's 20-foot Pit-Fired Sculptures to be Featured at
Bedford Art Site
WALNUT CREEK (May 6, 2005)
The sculptural work of ceramic artist
Jane Burton is the featured show, opening June 1 at the Bedford
Gallery. And the size of the pieces in this show is growing right
along with her passion for clay and the recognition of her work,
most recently at the Oakland Museum Collectors Gallery and W. Keith
& Kellogg University Art Gallery, California State Polytechnic
University, Pomona.
Featuring a series of large-scaled, 4' to 20', hand-built ceramic
sculptures that explore the vessel as a container shaped by the
life within, the Bedford show is titled Stories Left Behind. "I'm
intrigued with objects that hold life," Burton said in commenting
on her show, "the shell of the hermit crab, the cocoon of the
butterfly, the human body. Over the layers of time, they hold the
story of the life that resides within. The vessels remain as life
moves on, leaving their stories behind."
She created the largest of the pieces, the 20' Above It All specifically
for the space. "The stairs at the Dean Lesher Art Center go
up four flights and wrap around an area that begs for a large piece.
Prior to this, my tallest piece was only 8 feet," Burton explained.
"My studio has a low ceiling, and my kiln is just 28"
deep, so I built the piece in sections, loosely following a pattern
I had drawn out. I didn't even see it all together until after the
work was fired and ready to install."
While challenging to create, Burton finds these larger pieces fulfilling
as an artist. "In my large-scale pieces, I work in stages usually
on more than one at a time. The initial stages are like the beginning
of relationship, dealing with surface issues and structural problems,
technical and conceptual issues. As they grow and become closer
to my height, my relationship with them changes, becoming highly
personal, even intimate. And as they tower above me, I feel the
respect and power of a spiritual being in my presence."
Burton's passion for ceramics was ignited six years ago when she
enrolled in a pit-firing class at Ghost Ranch, New Mexico. There,
she learned the "Native American way" of digging the clay,
working it with er feet, forming a 4" coil pot, burnishing
the pot with a polish rock at several stages during the drying process
and finally firing it in a pit of wood and cow dung. When she returned
home to Walnut Creek, she immersed herself in classes and workshops
at the Civic Arts Education studio. "It wasn't long before
I pushed my husband's motorcycles out of the garage," she laughs,
"filling it with kilns and building a studio in the lower level
of my home."
Her earliest work focused around the traditional vessel form. Later,
under the direction of Andrée Thompson and Susannah Israel,
Burton studied figurative sculpture and incorporated her coil building
techniques as she continued in a sculptural direction. Her work
remains indicative of the vessel form as she represents the human
body as a vessel, leaving the heads open at the top.
The unpredictability of pit and smoke firing add to Burton's excitement
in the creative process. "I'm fully immersed in the performance
from the time I first dig my fingers into the clay until I pull
the vessel from the fire's ashes. I achieve the depth of texture
and color through a fusion of clay slips and washes, layers of organic
and inorganic materials, copper markers and tape as well as non-ceramic
finishes, such as gold leaf. The surface marks on the vessels are
softened and altered by the smoke. Her recent work has includes
the use of Terra Sigillata - fine clay particles suspended in water
- for a soft polished glow.
Burton's show in the Bedford Gallery Art Site opens along with
Pots: Objects of Virtue, a National Juried Exhibition of Pots in
the main gallery with a reception on Wednesday, June 1 from 5:30
to 7:30PM, and will remain on view through August 21, 2005.
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About Jane Burton
Jane was raised in Danville, California and received her Bachelor
of Fine Arts from the University of California at Davis in the early
70s, followed by graduate school and a career in graphic design.
She and her family have lived in Walnut Creek for 18 years. Jane
has received several awards and scholarships for her work in ceramics.
Her resume and samples of her work can be found on her Web site
at www.burtonceramics.com. Photos and additional information are
available upon request.
About the Bedford
Bedford Gallery is located in the Dean Lesher Regional Center for
the Arts at 1601 Civic Drive, Walnut Creek, California, four blocks
south of the Walnut Creek BART station. Bedford Gallery hours are
Tuesday through Sunday, noon to 5:00 PM. The gallery is also open
Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings from 6:00 to 8:00 PM as well
as other evenings when there are theater performances in the Regional
Center. Call 925.295.1417 for information about specific evening
hours and visit the gallery's Web site at www.bedfordgallery.org
for additional information.
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