Montreal Gazette

Ceramic artists ride resurgence in handcrafts

Buyers want small-scale pieces because they’re artistic, affordable

- SOLVEJ SCHOU

Lisa Jones founded her ceramics company, Pigeon Toe, eight years ago with an emphasis on petite pottery pieces like her three-legged “tripot” bowls and teensy stacking bowls.

Her timing could not have been better.

“I rode the wave of a resurgence in handcrafts and the individual maker,” says Jones, 32, of Oregon.

Artistic, accessible and affordable, small-scale handcrafte­d ceramics can appeal to young singles decorating first-time apartments, or to older folks and families looking for a more personaliz­ed look than mass-produced items provide.

“We have our entry-price customers, and aspiration­al pieces reaching a demographi­c of people with means to spend,” Jones says.

Pigeon Toe’s best seller is the three-inch-high (7.62 cm) tripot. It has an unglazed, white porcelain exterior, and a glazed interior in a choice of 16 colours.

“In the past five years, smaller ceramics have grown so much in popularity,” says Eugenia Santiesteb­an Soto, senior style editor at Better Homes and Gardens magazine. “They’re functional, but they’re also pieces of art. People are tapping into the notion of owning something beautiful and imperfect, but that you can use in your everyday life. You can tell there’s a hand that made it. It feels very soulful, authentic.”

Besides the evergreen appeal of mugs, Soto notes the functional allure of cups and vessels that can hold everything from food and drink to flowers, pencils and cotton swabs.

Mociun, a Brooklyn, N.Y.-based jewelry and home goods store, sells mugs, cups, tumblers, pitchers, vases, bowls and plates by dozens of artists from across the country. Prices range from $24 US for a speckled tumbler to $446 US for a set of five metallic nesting bowls. Mugs sell the best, company founder Caitlin Mociun says.

“I have watched artists grow in their careers, starting as a hobby and now creating full collection­s of pieces sold in several stores,” she says. “A lot of our customer traffic at the store is walk-ins or tourists. They are looking for gifts or take-away items, which small-scale pieces are great for.”

Jeremy Ayers is a ceramics artist in Waterbury, Vt., whose modern, rustic pieces are carried by stores (including Mociun) and his own online and studio shops. His studio is in an 1870 carriage barn where his great-great-grandfathe­r made wheels and carriages.

“I’ve been noticing more customers on the younger end who want to add to their home esthetic,” Ayers, 41, says. “Maybe because so many young people work in an office cubicle, having my mug in their cubicle is a breath of fresh air.”

With pottery, repetition is part of the process. Ayers usually produces his round salt boxes in batches of 20.

Creating each one out of a lump of clay on a pottery wheel takes about five minutes, he said. Then he trims the box and loads it into a kiln to be fired for 12 hours. It

takes another 12 hours for the box to cool. Then he puts a glaze coating on it and loads it back into the kiln. The glass in the clay and the glass in the glaze melt together, becoming one glassy object — stoneware — that doesn’t leak and is dishwasher-safe, he says.

For those wanting to make their own pottery, Ayers — who teaches ceramics — suggests going

to community classes. Jones, mostly self-taught, learned a lot from YouTube and books. Air-dry clay or clay easily baked in an oven are options, too, she said. Pottery wheels can cost upward of $700 to $1,500 US, and a kiln can run between $1,500 and $3,000 US, Ayers says.

Another market for small pottery pieces — especially those with a minimalist, Scandinavi­an-design esthetic — is as wedding gifts, an alternativ­e to large, expensive, traditiona­l china sets, Soto says.

“People live more casually now, and there’s been less of a need for formal china settings,” she says. “People want something that reflects the way they live a little more, day to day.”

 ?? DYLAN GRIFFIN ?? Ceramics artist Jeremy Ayers, 41, works in an 1870 carriage barn in Vermont, sometimes flanked by sons Fletcher, 5, and Weston, 4. Ayers says many ceramics customers are young adults.
DYLAN GRIFFIN Ceramics artist Jeremy Ayers, 41, works in an 1870 carriage barn in Vermont, sometimes flanked by sons Fletcher, 5, and Weston, 4. Ayers says many ceramics customers are young adults.
 ?? JESSICA SIPE ?? A pitcher, mugs, a jar and a teapot are Ayers creations.
JESSICA SIPE A pitcher, mugs, a jar and a teapot are Ayers creations.
 ?? LIAM GILLES ?? Stacking thimble cups are created by the Portland, Ore.-based ceramics company Pigeon Toe.
LIAM GILLES Stacking thimble cups are created by the Portland, Ore.-based ceramics company Pigeon Toe.

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