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About:
Artist Sandra Blain
MFA/Ceramics,
University of Wisconsin, 1972
MS/Art, University of Wisconsin, 1967
BS/Education, Northern Illinois University, 1964
Using
found objects and industrial refuse as textural tools, Sandra
Blain makes impressions in her clay pieces, creating works
that are both decorative and documentary of current times.
Concentrating on form, color, and texture simultaneously,
Blain strives to capture time and place in her earthenware
creations.
A
professional ceramist since 1964, Blain's work has exhibited
nationally. Sandra Blain was a Professor of Art at the
University of Tennessee in Knoxville until 2004.
Sculptural
forms inspired by curbside environments provide facades to
capture the discard of our culture. Relief surfaces reveal a
personal narrative experienced on daily walks. The intuitive
manipulation and marking of clay is influences by historical,
environmental, natural, and man-made systems of organization.
Significant in the construction of form and surface
impressions is the inherent quality of clay - the process that
enables the medium to record the spontaneity of a direct
tactile experience. Manipulated and assembled handbuilt forms
impressed with found objects serve as metaphors for the impact
one has on their surroundings. Slips and glazes are drawn,
brushed, stamped, stenciled and airbrushed on the surface of
the pieces during various intervals of a multiple firing
process. Visual complexity is the result of collecting
material, layering process and realizing ideas.
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