Julia Galloway - Part 1
Article
by Lana Wilson.
Published in Clay Times
Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.
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This is the first of two interview
columns on Julia Galloway. A third column featuring her work will be a
step-by-step photo process showing her work on a piece, plus some of her
glaze formulas. Presently, Galloway teaches at the School for American
Craft at Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, New York, but
her pottery experience dates back to high school.
Wilson: I understand you have taken a long and
varied route to become a potter. Tell us about it.
Galloway: I started making pottery in high school. At Brookline High [in
Massachusetts], there was a separate building called the Manual Training
Building. It was a refuge from the complication and chaotic time of my adolescence.
I had a wonderful pottery teacher, Mr. Lane, who let me come and go as I
pleased. I got the act of throwing pretty early, and in high school, it was
a bit of a miracle to me that I was good at anything. When I was a senior,
Mr. Lane suggested that if I wanted to make pots, I should go to Alfred University.
He helped me shoot slides of my pots and the following fall, I moved from
Boston to a small town in New York State.
At Alfred, I received an intense education, but the most important part of
my time there was that I learned how to work and developed a self-confidence
that I could do anything. After undergraduate school, I went to study in
Japan. I had been very interested in Japanese pottery and very much wanted
the romantic, quiet life of the unknown craftsman.
When I was in Japan, I had a bit of a crisis of identity. I saw so many wonderful
pots there, I felt like all the good pots had been made, and I realized-to
my shock-that I was truly American. I also realized that despite how hard
I tried, there was very little in my personality suited to be a humble, unknown
village craftsman.
When I returned, I wandered around, trying to figure out what to do. For
two years I stocked produce at the Boston Food Co-op. This was wonderful
training for a potter. All day long I arranged beautiful forms, shapes, colors,
and textures. How beautiful green leaf lettuce looked lined up next to orange
carrots and rutabagas. I also enjoyed the brute labor of the job. It was
tremendously satisfying to me, going to bed tired after a good day's work,
arranging ripe melons and green peppers.
After some time, I enrolled as a special student at Massachusetts College
of Art. When I was at Mass Art, it was kind of wild. There was a group of
us that worked all the time, day and night, and we spoke about ceramics constantly.
I had almost no classes and put miles on my hands that year. They just let
me make, and I began to believe in my own process of making and rebuild my
confidence in being a potter. I also embraced my newfound-rather than adopted-sense
of beauty. The next year, I went to the University of Colorado in Boulder
because I wanted to study with Betty Woodman. While I was there, I thought
I could single-handedly resolve the difference or conflict between art and
craft. I was a difficult student, rather contrary and confrontational. In
an effort to make traditional craft in a fine arts school, I had to learn
how to speak about all work-all kinds of work-to be taken seriously. I became
much more interested in what different kinds of work were about, rather than
what category they fell into.
During my time at Boulder, I fell off my bicycle into an irrigation ditch,
and seriously broke my wrist. I could not throw at all, but had the good
fortune of a kiln-load of bisque ware in my studio, so I started to glaze.
And I glazed and glazed those pots and fired them again and again. I fired
pots high-fire and then fired the same pots again low-fire. It was then that
I began to work with surface decoration and was set free from some old, learned
rule that pots were all form.
During my time in graduate school. I attended the Nova Scotia College of
Art and Design. I knew that I needed to work with more potters and I wanted
to be surrounded by knowledge of historical pottery. In Canada, they asked
me what my pots were about. So I realized I needed to search for an aesthetic
that was more my own.
Wilson: Are you always looking for that slightly
new thing in your work, that's a slight change? If so, is it design, or technique,
or something else?
Galloway: By nature, I am not always adventurous and I always need a deadline
to get things done. It is the energy from the anxiety and pressure of deadlines
that helps push me. Working under a bit of pressure, I make different decisions
than when I have all the time in the world. It seems like, about once a year,
I look down at what I'm making, and I am bored, bored, bored. I know what
is going to happen and the forms become dull and the surface lazy. Then I
bump around a little in my studio, recycle clay, mop the floor, complain
to friends about the state of the world. Then I get restless and find a little
thread, a tune, words in a song, a new technique, an odd glaze result, a
personal or world event. Then I am in the thick of it again.
Wilson: What is most difficult about your work?
which processes do you love the most and which would you love to skip?
Ga Iloway: I would love to skip the selling part. Creativity and commodity
are not great bedfellows. Dealing with the financial end of things makes
me tense. Sometimes the prices seem much too low, other times much too high-even
when the price is the same. It is not that I do not value my work. I think
it is worth good money. There is a lot of careful labor and constant consideration
in each pot, but I don't really know how to put a monetary value on that.
Mostly I look around at other potters' prices and try to gauge where I fit.
I made a living off my work before I became a teacher. I had thought that
making a living from my pots would help me understand this better, but mostly
it just made me tense, defiant, and resentful.
Wilson: Tell us about keeping your own work
going while teaching. What do you get from teaching besides a paycheck?
Galloway: Being a full-time teacher and making fresh and interesting work
is barely sustainable. I decided to teach because it was the right time.
I have the energy to do this right now. Sometimes it is draining, I get frustrated
with my students when they are wasting time, I get jealous. Sometimes I like
being right there next to them, working along with them in their discoveries.
The balance of teaching, making, personal care, and community is impossible.
I am not particularly good at it, and am almost always late for everything,
though my intention is to be on time. If teaching were just a paycheck to
me, well, I would find an easier way to get a paycheck. Since I have been
teaching, I have never worked so hard, with so many parts of my psyche. And-daily-I
am amazed by how much I learn from the students, and how differently people
see the world. I am pressed to continually reassess my own value systems
and realize that teaching is the best way to really learn something.
Lana Wilson is a Del Mar, Californla handbuilder who teaches at Mesa
College Extension, Mira Costa College, and gives frequent workshops. She
is also the author of Ceramics: Shape and Surface. Visit
her Web site at www.lanawilson.com.
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