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Carol McFarlan

Wheel thrown & altered porcelain
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Artist Statement
On a youthful journey around the world looking at people and cultures, I became interested in ancient pottery. People and clay, I saw, had been engaged in a very long and intimate relationship. The history of whole civiliations was recorded on clay. On the Greek island of Crete, in a museum, the pots of the Minoan civilization (1500 BC or so) caught my breath and touched my heart. I saw celebration; a flowering of the human spirit. Here, to me, was love communicated through clay.
In Japan, I saw that pots no only resided in museums of the past but were still made and used every day. What I saw in Japan was a way of life that looked good to me. On returning home, I because a pottery student of Marguerite Wildenhain, whose training was at the Bauhaus, and who had settled in the coastal hills of Northern California. At this point, I have been a potter for 34 years.
It is important to me that the handmade pot be an integral part of people's lives, bringing beauty and joy to daily living.
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This Page Last Updated:
Thursday, September 15, 2005
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