Matt Wilt Mug Cone 10, salt fired, dark stoneware (4 x 4.5 inches) CUP 208 $40 SOLD |
Statement:
In making
functional pottery, I try to treat each piece as a condensed sculpture. The
formal combinations of line, mass, balance, skin, volume, and proportion allow
for an infinite number of conclusions. When working with these variables, my
goal is to find an arrangement that has a strong visual presence and emotive
impact on the user. Ultimately, whether a pot is being held in someone’s hands
or is sitting on a shelf, I would like its presence to be felt.
Matt Wilt Mug Cone 10, salt fired, dark stoneware (4 x 4.25 inches) CUP 209 $40 |
Each of these cups was fired to cone 10 (2,380 degree Fahrenheit), in a salt kiln. Sodium, in the form of rock salt, is introduced into the kiln at approximately 2,300 degrees and continues for an hour while peak temperature is reached. The sodium vaporizes and creates a glaze on the surface of the dark stoneware clay, and also affects the color of the applied glazes. The salt firing process allows for a measure of unpredictability that is both rewarding and challenging.
Matt Wilt Mug Cone 10, salt fired, dark stoneware (4.5 x 4.5 inches) CUP 210 $40 |
Bio:
Matt Wilt is currently Associate Professor of Art at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville. He received his Bachelor's degree in Ceramics and Art Education at Pennsylvania State University and his Master of Fine Arts degree at Ohio University, Athens. Wilt worked for two years at Boston Valley Terra Cotta, an architectural terra cotta restoration firm in Buffalo, New York, where he began to work more extensively with plaster molds and imitative glaze surfaces. He also traveled extensively in Nepal and Thailand prior to pursuing graduate study.
Matt Wilt Mug Cone 10, salt fired, dark stoneware (3.75 x 4 inches) CUP 211 $40 |
Wilt has been the recipient
of numerous awards: He has received two Pennsylvania Council on the Arts
grants, an Illinois Arts Council Fellowship, as well as the Evelyn Shapiro
Foundation Fellowship through The Clay Studio in Philadelphia. He has been
active as a Visiting Artist at schools such as Syracuse University, Tyler
School of Art, Indiana University and Herron School of Art.
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