Details
First Name | Chris |
Last Name | Snedden |
Nickname | clayguy4u |
Social Media
Website |
My Ceramics
In the studio I like to do | Handbuilding, Throwing on the Wheel |
Pottery Wheel | Pacifica |
Clay body | Stoneware |
Clay Brand | Tuckers Mid Smooth Stone |
Kiln Type | Electric Kiln, Raku Kiln, Pit firing |
Kiln Atmosphere | Oxidation Atmosphere |
Temperature | Cone 6 unless the pieces are intended for Alternative surface firings. |
Glaze | I use a clear glaze with just a little bit of cobalt in it. |
About Me
Introduction |
Chris Snedden has been a potter for over 35 years in London, Ontario, Canada. He began his studies after high school at Bealart where he fell in love with clay. Chris went on to study at Georgian College in Barrie and has since worked in almost every facet of the pottery business, from building electric kilns, teaching courses and workshops across the province and Canada. He has produced gift ware and ceramic artwork for the international market, and completed numerous private commissions for everything from liturgical pieces to commemorative plaques and recognition awards. Currently, Chris is Director of Artistic Programming at the London Clay Art Centre, is a Ceramics Professor at Lambton College in Sarnia, Ontario and serves as Past President for FUSION: The Ontario Clay and Glass Association. His work is shown at galleries across Ontario and he continues to teach, give workshops, and develop his award winning work. |
My Artist Statement | Almost all of the work that I do in clay is decorated with “slip” or liquid clay with colourants in it, and a durable clear glaze over top. Over the last decade, I have been using a transfer technique to apply imagery to my pieces. The transfers can be achieved a number of ways; mono-printing, block printing, silk screen printing, and stenciling with paper resists all contribute to bring depth to the surface. While there are many ways of applying imagery to clay work, this particular method allows for the overlapping of images, and brushwork, helping to contribute to the often collage like nature of the surface. I strive to create a sense of harmony in each piece by the use of various devices, colour, line, and repetition chiefly among them. Often, the imagery I use is inspired by beauty in nature and the inner relationships brought to bear in the world around us. I firmly believe that whatever walk of life a person may tread, there is an innate human desire to bring our inner life in harmony and expression with our outer life. It may express itself in the passions we pursue, the fashions we wear, or something as simple as the mug we choose to drink our morning coffee in. A vessel is an apt metaphor for these relationships and the play between the inside and outside, the conscious use of formal principles and elements of design, the spontaneous interrelationship between them, and the process of making is a study that excites me to the point where, even after thirty years, I am still burning my fingers pulling hot pots out of the kiln because I can’t wait to see the next result.
|
Social Networks