Fear and Desire: A Gift of Trust

I will be handing out ceramic balls which I have made to people I know, and people I do not know, in exchange for their stories.

After these people tell me their stories, I will blog about them and post a picture of the ball I have given them next to their story.

My concept, Fear and Desire, is one which involves a certain level of trust in the sharing, and I see this as a gift.

From a very early age, it has been easy for me to trust and bond with people whom I share a certain "team" kinship with. The balls reference the "team" experience for me, and it is my hope that this gesture will engender trust and generosity in the people I give them to.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

The Process

I have been going to the ceramics studio for a week now, diligently leaving work at 5, riding my bike across town to arrive at PNCA in time to eat a modest meal and begin working on my balls by 6.  I begin each evening by exchanging my wet bike clothes for my clay-caked studio garb: an old pair of cut-offs and a black long-sleeve skating shirt a high school friend gave me.  I slip on my rubber clogs and begin checking on the balls I had made during my previous session to see if any of them need the bottoms trimmed off, then I begin to wedge the clay to throw on the wheel.  I spend the next few hours making and trimming balls, and as the time passes, I lose myself in the process.  I remember this meditation, and my body responds to the rhythm of the wheel turning the clay; I am in sync.  When all of the leather hard balls have been trimmed and my new balls have been made, I decorate by carving or painting colored slip onto the balls, more decoration for the less spherical ones, less for the more perfect orbs.   I have already noticed that I am getting better at it, as I have needed less and less decoration to compensate for my rusty throwing technique.

After having been away from the studio and making for so long, I feel as though I have just sprouted wings and learned to fly, as if a piece of myself I had lost  and forgotten long ago has come back to me.  I have gone through a wide-spanning range of emotions in the last few years, but this feeling, that of elation and absolute abandon, is one I have not felt in a very long time, and the other day in the studio, I realized I was so happy, that I began to cry.  I know well the feeling of being raw, where your emotions are on the surface of your skin and any little annoyance brings about a flare up of anger and hostility.  I believe that I am now experiencing a converse situation where any little wonder brings about a giggle; it tickles at the joy that resides on my skin.