Sculpture > Recent Works

Crossing: Two Pronghorn Bucks
Glazed low-fired clay
21"x30"x9.5"
2013
Chariot Horse #3: Thorion
Low-fired clay, post-firing reduction
22"x20"x10"
2012
Cap: "I'll take any job."
low-fired clay, post-firing reduction
24"x20x13"
2012
Challenger
glazed low-firedclay
2015
Lookout
glazed low-fired clay
2013
Coquette
Raku fires clay
2013
Ben: "They Cut Back My Hours"
Low-fired clay, post firing reduction
22"x23"x10.5"
2012
Bob: "I Can Pull Anything"
Low-fired glazed clay, Raku crackle
20.5"x23"x10)
2012
Bill: "I'm Done With the Collar"
Low-fired glazed clay, Raku crackle
23"x22"x11.5"
2012
Blue: "Aren't We Going Out Today?
low-fired glazed clay
22.5"x23"x12"
2012
Babe: "Mom, I Applied Everywhere"
Low-fired clay,some glaze, post firing reduction
19.5"x19"x8"
2012
Joe: "I Heard You Calling Me"
Low-fired glazed clay, Raku crackle
22"x23"x12"
2012
Dave: "I Got Laid Off from My Job"
Low-fired clay,some glaze, post firing reduction
21"x20"x11"
2012
Bess: "You Didn't Forget the Sugar?"
Low-fired glazed clay, Raku crackle
23.5"x22"x11"
2012
Chariot Horse II: Aethe
Raku-fired, copper reduction
19"x21"x8.5
2012
Chariot Horse I: Arion
Raku-fired, copper reduction
19"x20"x10.5"
2012

Horses: Thoughts and Process

This series is about horses: about a lot of tossing, turning, expressive heads and necks in various surfaces, textures, and colors. For a long time now I have especially enjoyed drawing draft horses and using them as a theme in my art. This may be because my first horse, Red, was an old roman-nosed chestnut, sixteen hands tall and a little furry around the fetlocks. We bought him out of a field in Goleta when I was twelve, for twenty-five dollars. He might have been a plow horse, but I just rode him. He had his opinions, and a mouth like iron, but we worked things out together over time. I had other horses, but he somehow filled my eye, and it is mainly draft horses that have the solid look I love.

When I am working, I control the medium to a large extent, but I also feel some guidance from it, working in a sort of contemplative collaboration with the clay, or the printing plate, and the theme, and possibly the deity. I am usually hopeful when new directions appear, as they do, but I am never sure what will emerge. With this series, I started each neck about the same way, with two large slabs, impressed with rope and net textures when rolled out, then shaped over hump molds of piled up tee shirts. I made the form for each head by wrapping a slab around a lozenge shaped tee shirt bundle. When the parts stiffened up enough, I joined the neck sections. I worked on two at a time. In joining head and neck parts together, and adding mane and ears and features, the variations appear, and the attitudes emerge. Draft horses have simple names, so I gave each one a name, first, and then listened to what each one had to say to me, for the title. Nina de Creeft Ward, Fall 2012