The Ghost in the Mirror

Guest Posting by Staz – Matt Stasica

Jimi Hendrix, one of the most legendary guitarist and revolutionary rock musician,  also had a stick in the philosopher bonfire.

Jimi and his guitar is on fire!

A transcending quote by the legend goes as follows, “I used to live in a room full of mirrors; all I could see was me. I take my spirit and I crash my mirrors, now the whole world is here for me to see.” In our room full of mirrors and billboard postered walls, can we ever see the truth?  Can we go beyond Target plastic ware and Wally World knock-off ceramics (obviously made by the cold, steely machinery).  Grab your plastic tuberware sandwich containers, rubber molded cups, imitation ceramic coffee mugz and hurl them into the mirrors, bad luck will not follow, the witch Petronilla de Meath gave me her word.

On another note: Live music is a transcendental experience not only for the listener or audience, but also for the artists performing.  Even though set lists are composed of songs found on the album, leaks of human error spill out – every once and a while – filling into the ear drums of the crowd.  However, these errors don’t lead listeners to delirious convulsions and contortions, but rather they melt into an art of improvisation.  Temporally, these “out of cue” moments become stored in the mind and bore more meaning and mass into the music, the artist, and the band; rather than, per say, a flawless perfected show that exactly replicates every down stroke, note, rhythm, and harmony. (man, doesn’t that sound like a machine).  Look at some handmade ceramics and taste the difference.

Pai Mei

Every artist recognizes the difference between mistakes and “works of trash.”  Most will smell different than a Jackson Pollock or Max Ernst piece of work; for the most part they would smell like an old dirty pair of shoes that have had some Zombie foot spending its time decomposing and sitting idle and motionless…you gotta trust me, even a former president saw the Zombies as a real threat.  But to learn from these “works of trash” and move forward, can provide a lesson that Pai Mei would generously dish out to any of his disciples.  There is no free lunch, and the waves of T.V. infomercials will tell you differently; but, then again, who would believe a testimony made by sweat-scaled lizard waiting to steal your eggs of the future.

Mistakes are not on anyone’s menu, but they happen to be served sometimes with a large glass of iron stained well-water.  Cherrico Pottery has had it’s fare share of catastrophes but cracked platters and bubbly pots are just a couple…hundred fallen soldiers along life’s warpath.  Too much energy in the wrong direction and you’ll be swimming with the fishes, or on clouds of Surrealism, as the forever 27 crew found out all too soon.

        

The universe might be named after a candy bar, but does it taste just as its advertised?  All the nicks, dings, dents, chipped out pieces left by the past are a reminder of “that one time…”  The Local Blend coffee shop is an outlet for Cherrico Pottery.  Serving its delicatessen with a side of ceramic slung pottery.  By natural events, handmade coffeeware is dinged up daily!  Even though you might stumble across a chip or 2 on your mug, don’t fear the flaws.  Like scars on your skin, these unavoidable tattoos reflect the life-history of the mug and it’s journey through the Blend.

Photo by Jenny Birkhofer

Don’t plaster up the hole in the hallway wall – the result of playing catch with a softball inside.  That faded and shabby concert shirt you have from the 1980 Van Halen tour, “World Invasion: Party Tll’ You Die,” should be framed, or just keep on rocking it on Casual Friday.  You spend your life developing flaws in your character, why fix em’?

 

Sculpture, Pottery and the Nautilus

Guest Posting by Matt Stasica

Art has looked nature in the eye, held out fist fulls of gold, in order to bargain for nature’s physchotrophic prowess and phenomena. Just enough gold has been traded in order to cast lost secrets of the elements of design into the light. Simple organic replication sets a flame to any piece of art especially when it is held steadily in a crazed art enthusiasts gaze, as seen in Joel’s 1st place piece in the current exhibition at the Paramount Arts Center, Light/Shadows:

"Don Reitz, Ernst Haeckel" Wood Fired Stoneware, 28" x 16"

Titled after 2 artists that inspired the piece, Joel spun the wheel and formed organic shapes before assembling this stacked vessel form, in a similar fashion as Don Reitz- an American Master of Abstract Expressionism.  View his genius interpretations of teapots, in this 26 inch tall “Teastack” at the Lacoste Gallery, in Massachusetts:

Don Reitz, "Teastack" Wood Fired Stoneware, 26" x 14" x 13"

Reitz succumbs to the Abstract Expressionist process, skewing pottery forms and ending at a new beginning.  Joel’s sculptural vessel is more removed from vessel based Abstract Expressionism due to it’s biological sense of order.  It’s counterpart was also accepted to this show, entitled “Stinkhorn” because of it’s reference to the wild mushrooms that seem to grow out of another realm.

     

With biological abstractions that maintain a sense of stability, both of Joel’s sculptures beckon similarities to the nautilus shell.  The nautilus, a thin spiral shell-bound organism, can be found replicated in countless pieces of art, culture, history and science. Illustrations of Ernst Haeckel embody it’s allure.

http://www.johnchiappone.com/hum_int.html

In some forms, the nautilus may be a mind bending illusion that petrifies peoples minds to a trance state; to others, a sign of order and balance.  Its shell is a medallion to biotic art and organic designs. Its meaning – perfection, or some call it “the western dream.” A steady stare into the shells mesmerizing spiral can juice out phsychotrophic alterations. What does the spiral mean? Is it a path, a line, going up and out or down and in? Are we in the fade with lock jaw monsters – nipping at our gullets – broadcasting from billboards and T.V. infomercials. Where is truth in such a mirage of design?

 

The meaning to the nautilus is possibly a far out conclusion- sort of like the meaning to/of life (which happens to be the number 42. By the way the number 42 is a unique number having varying properties such as being a primary pseudo-perfect number, or the angle (measured in decimal degrees) of a rainbow.) Maybe finding the meaning to the the nautilus is the backwards approach to the answer. Artists see beyond the square and see a cube, Ceramicists see beyond a cube and see its history in time.  Similarly, artist Alex Grey makes mind bending, cerebral art that links a viewer to another dimension, while connecting with so many historical landmarks.

On the other hand, ceramic mammoth monolithic vessels carry a shape, physical texture, and an awareness to function over the centuries.

Why the nautilus? Why not. The thing about placing a design is that its jigsaw must fit into the universe of things. Looking at Cherrico’s placement of the nautilus design you can tell that its placement was premeditated and ordered to fit – or – the free-flowing rock/funk enthusiast has just let things go to the wind:

 

If you were to ask a Nautilus, “what is the meaning of your shell?” it may vividly responded that, “its design is perfect for the function.” Ceramics and the nautilus are a marriage of earth and life. If one were to divorce the other, well… that’s for another episode.