Walter McConnell

Walter McConnell

Walter McConnell is an American ceramic artist living and working in Belmont, New York. He is most recognized for his unfired ceramic installations addressing the relationship between nature and culture – more specifically, the means through which contemporary culture constructs an understanding of nature. [ Albers, Kate, Walter McConnell, and Scott Chamberlin. 2001. "Walter McConnell". What follows--.] McConnell currently serves as an Associate Professor of Ceramic Art at the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University, in Alfred, New York.

Biography

McConnell was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1956. He attended the University of Connecticut, Storrs, where he received a BFA in Ceramics and Painting in 1978. McConnell earned his MFA in ceramics from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in 1986.

Artwork

McConnell states of his work: “My work is a mediation on my relationship to nature within a culture decisively alienated from it. In a technological age, where contact with nature is at best indirect and our experience of it variously defined and mediated by the culture we inhabit, my work is a site where I negotiate conflicting ideas about the natural world and forge a connection to it.” [http://art.alfred.edu/faculty/fa_mcconnell.html. accessed December 10, 2007]

Unfired Clay Installations

McConnell’s unfired installations typically feature scenes reminiscent of an imagined natural world, rich in their own fecundity. All manner of flora abound within the spaces he creates. The individual forms from which the scenes are assembled vary in their rendering. In a single environment, McConnell may display forms that are directly reminiscent of natural vegetation, “meaty succulents, low lying flowers, ferns, and the like,” [ http://www.criticalceramics.org/reviews/shows/coolmatt.htm. accessed December 5, 2007.] while simultaneously providing more abstracted forms – some of which would best be described as fecal. In many instances, McConnell also juxtaposes these elements with kitsch imagery, such as garden bunnies or the figure of Snow White. This mass of natural and manipulated imagery, at times rendered with up to 2000 pounds of raw terra cotta, typically resides within a thin plastic enclosure extending toward the ceiling. Within the terrarium-like environments a single light illuminates the raw clay within, creating a space moist from condensation emanating from the unfired clay.

Jeanne Quinn describes the experience of standing in front of these works: “In McConnell’s constructions, he perfectly creates the idea of the walled garden, of the desired place that cannot be entered. …with its translucent veil of plastic that contains all the sensuality of the wet, sculpted clay, we cannot quite see what is within. A mist of droplets, of evaporated water, a seemingly ephemeral, insignificant screen, prevents us from seeing the interior.” [Quinn, Jeanne. in "Because the earth is 1/3 dirt". Boulder, CO: CU Art Museum, University of Colorado at Boulder. 2004.]

Interpretations of these works are varied. Mitchell Merback writes of McConnell’s unfired works, “On the one hand we have real-time systems that exist in a space that is frankly architectural. When activated by light and heat, the changing biosphere also references the duration of our encounter with it. …they are concrete and real. …On the other hand, we have an artist determined to expose what is perhaps the key cultural precondition of today’s ecological depredations: not merely the alienation of culture from nature, but the displacement of nature by its cultural representation.” Merback continues, “It is no longer the old lamentable case of our being estranged from what is real in nature, but that the real has been driven to extinction by its ever-widening simulation.” [ Merback, M. “Cooled matter: ceramic sculpture in the expanded field.” "Ceramics (Sydney, Australia)" no. 39 (2000) p. 6-15.]

"Theory of Everything" Series

McConnell, in more recent years, has been displaying works constructed wholly of slip cast (see slipcasting) elements arranged into larger architectural structures. The individual forms presented in these works include such imagery as animal sculptures, Christmas trees, figures from popular culture, religious icons and faux Ming vases. These objects are derived from a bevy of plaster molds intended for the hobby ceramics industry – from which McConnell casts and fires before arranging them into larger, singular structures.

Holly Henessian describes her reaction to one of these works, Theory of Everything (Blue version), “The Virgin Mary and ET were shoved together with other luminous characters from TV, creating a fantasia of delight.” She also states, “His final overall forms are simple shapes such as cones or mountains that are primary to our human collective consciousness.” [Hanessian, Holly. “Encountering Abundance: Multiplicity in Clay.” "Ceramics (Sydney, Australia)" no. 63 (2006) p. 10.]

In March, 2007, McConnell displayed a white version of his Theory of Everything at the Cross McKenzie Ceramic Art gallery in Washington DC. The Cross McKenzie website describes the work: “Ultimately, the finished work transcends its kitsch and commercial elements to create an architectural monument referencing Hindi Stupas [see Stupa] and is magically imbued with a sense of spirituality. McConnell's artistic sensibility transforms Western pop cultural waste into an Eastern aesthetic worthy of worship and offerings.” [ http://www.crossmackenzieceramicarts.com/mcconnellinfo.php. accessed December 10, 2007.]

External links

* [http://www.crossmackenzieceramicarts.com/mcconnellinfo.php Cross McKenzie Ceramic Art Gallery, Washington, DC.]
* [http://www.researchchannel.org/prog/displayevent.aspx?rID=2029 What Follows, A video interview with Walter McConnell]
* [http://art.alfred.edu/faculty/fa_mcconnell.html Alfred University Faculty Website]
* [http://www.criticalceramics.org/reviews/shows/coolmatt.htm Show review, "Cooled Matter" on criticalceramics.org]

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • McConnell (surname) — McConnell is a surname, and may refer to: Brent McConnell, Australian rugby league footballer David H. McConnell, founder and president California Perfume Company Doug McConnell, American television travel host Drew McConnell, musician Jack… …   Wikipedia

  • Walter Huddleston — Walter Dee Huddleston United States Senator from Kentucky In office January 3, 1973 – January 3, 1985 Preceded by …   Wikipedia

  • Walter W. Bankhead — Walter Will Bankhead (* 21. Juli 1897 in Jasper, Alabama; † November 1988) war ein US amerikanischer Jurist und Politiker (Demokratische Partei). Werdegang Walter Will Bankhead besuchte öffentliche Schulen. Er graduierte 1916 am Marion Military… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Walter Flowers — (* 12. April 1933 in Greenville, Alabama; † 12. April 1984 in McLean, Virginia) war ein US amerikanischer Politiker (Demokratische Partei). Werdegang Walter Flowers besuchte öffentliche Schulen in Tuscaloosa. Er graduierte 1955 an der University… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Walter Pope — ( c. 1627 1714) was an English astronomer and poet. He was born in Northamptonshire and was the half brother of John Wilkins, who would become bishop of Chester. He was educated at Wadham College, Oxford, with a BA in 1649, MA in 1651. Until the… …   Wikipedia

  • Walter Inglis Anderson — Infobox Artist bgcolour = #6495ED name = Walter Inglis Anderson imagesize = birthname = birthdate = birth date|1903|9|29|mf=y location = New Orleans, Louisiana deathdate = death date and age|1965|11|30|1903|9|29|mf=y deathplace = New Orleans,… …   Wikipedia

  • Walter Anderson Museum of Art — The Walter Anderson Museum of Art (WAMA) opened in 1991 in historic Ocean Springs, Mississippi. WAMA is dedicated to the celebration of the works of Walter Inglis Anderson (1903 1965), American master, whose depictions of the plants, animals, and …   Wikipedia

  • Mitch McConnell — United States Senator from Kentucky Incumbent Assumed offi …   Wikipedia

  • Harden M. McConnell — (born July 18, 1927 in Richmond, Virginia) is an American physical chemist at Stanford University.[1] Contents 1 Birth and education 2 Research 3 Awards and honours …   Wikipedia

  • James McConnell Anderson — James McConnell Mac Anderson (b. August 9, 1907, New Orleans d. 1998, Jackson County, Mississippi) was an American painter, muralist, and pottery designer and decorator, youngest of the three brothers (along with Walter Inglis Anderson and… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”