I am not a ceramicist, a potter, a clay-worker. I may have recently sold a ceramic piece to my in-laws, but that was perhaps the best piece of ceramics I have ever made, and they just happened to be rather fond of it.
But, the rest of my ceramics have lacked this same artistic beauty. It’s interesting that as I was looking and taking pictures of my grade school ceramic pieces how little I feel I actually learned while making these pieces. I learned more in the one seven week block class I took at BYU, and could have learned a lot more if I had taken the advanced course.
Speaking of that class, it felt really great to work with clay. I have no questions about the very real artistic sensibility about making art from clay. It’s direct. It’s emotional. Every effort you put into it gets an immediate and direct result. It’s fun and it’s a release! But, sadly I just don’t have the knack for it. Maybe I could get decent at it someday. I can only hope!
Anyways, I decided that since I did not want to keep, store, and protect my old grade school pieces in the several (and very probable) moves we’ll take within even the next five years, I decided to take their pictures and bid them adieu.
So, I would now like to present to you what, I, a “big-shot artist” (I know you are all laughing), did when I was just a little girl.
In first grade I made my very first pinch pot! What a beauty!
In second grade I made an awesome alligator! I mean look at this thing!
In third grade (I think) I made this alien.
I think I was a weird child… I was kind of obsessed with aliens at the time, and I remember having several, sometimes reoccurring, dreams that had aliens, dinosaurs, and natural disasters in them… Plus I had older siblings who affected what I watched and drew…
I don’t remember exactly what grade it was when I made this UGLY thing, but I think it was fourth or fifth.
In sixth grade I made this weird head thing. He/she is supposed to, I think, look like a “Skeeter” drawing that my brothers Trevor and Tyler used to doddle and make comics about when they were in middle school. I don’t know why I gave “it” a hat, but the sun on his shirt matches the one of the previous piece. Let’s just say that a whole lot of thought didn’t go into this one, and it is now no longer in my possessions.
He/she is supposed to, I think, look like a “Skeeter” drawing that my brothers Trevor and Tyler used to doddle and make comics about when they were in middle school. I don’t know why I gave “it” a hat, but the sun on his shirt matches the one of the previous piece. Let’s just say that a whole lot of thought didn’t go into this one, and it is now no longer in my possessions.
In middle school I made this nice four-sided box.
In high school I also made this crazy monster.
In high school I used a spinning wheel, my one and only time, and made this bowl.
If you want to see what I did in college, CLICK HERE.
So, my question now is what do you, as a parent, do with art your child brings home that really is ugly? Do you really store it for years and then give it back to them? Do you quietly dispose of it when your child is not looking? And do you as an artist still have your artwork from grade school? (I actually have most of the paper art I did as well. Maybe I’ll write about them someday.) As an artist do you ever throw your stuff away? Is it really hard for you to do?
I am really curious so please comment!
HEY KATELYN I REMEMBER ALL OF THOSE CERAMICS!!!!!!!! CRAZY! you know what my mom kept EVERYTHING that i made and she gave it back to me as well and its fun to look at, but i chose not to keep any of it. i thought to myself, "am i really going to hang this up on my wall in my future home someday? i mean really am i?" and deep down i knew i wasnt going to ever hang up my artwork on my walls cus thats where my future kids art may go someday. plus after you die, whos going to want to take it and save it? i can understand your current artwork but artwork from gradeschool? highly doubt some one seventy years from now will want to take your artwork after you die. thats how i see it.
ReplyDelete