In
His image?
Review
from Seven Days: Published 02.16.05)
EXHIBIT: "Handed Down: A Tradition
Sustained," works by Hideo Okino and 11
local potters influenced by him. Living/
Learning Center Gallery, UVM, Burlington.
Through March 4.
ARTWORK:Ceramic vessels by Hideo
Okino
The "tradition" referred to in the exhibit
"Handed Down: A Tradition Sustained" is one
of dedication to ceramics. All 11 Vermont
potters featured in the show worked under
the tutelage of master ceramist Hideo Okino
in the 1970s, but they've refined their own
creative works, and paths. The stylistic
diversity represented in the show -- and the
fact that several of Okino's former students
have established successful careers in the
arts -- speak well of his skills as a
teacher.
Okino is now in his early sixties and lives
in Hawaii, but 35 years ago he became the
first full-time ceramics instructor at UVM.
He stayed for 14 years. The artists'
statements at the exhibition document those
early clay days at the university. The small
department began in the "UVM Pot Shop,"
cramped basement quarters in the building
behind Ira Allen Chapel. Okino and his
students later moved to Williams Hall, where
the art department remains today. Among
those early students was Joan Watson, who
curated this exhibition. She's been in
charge of the ceramics co-op at the Living/
Learning Center since 1977.
It's remarkable that many of Okino's
students stayed in touch with each other,
and continue to express the depth of his
influence. Tim McCosker of Thetford states
that Okino "gave me an appreciation of the
natural world as a source of inspiration."
McCosker is presenting wall-mounted tiles
here. One piece, dating from his studies
with Okino, is composed of three rectangular
tiles; a horizontal swath of glaze in earthy
colors spans, and unifies, all three. The
glaze is like an island on the textural
beige surface. A contemporary piece
comprising nine tiles hung together
demonstrates McCosker's continued affinity
for natural form as well as evolution. He
takes line and negative space into account
as formal elements in the newer work.
Bristol artist
Robert Compton wrote that Okino got
students to "contemplate what the work was
about" in a manner different than that of
full-time production potters. Compton's
monochromatic vessels in the Living/Learning
show are both decorative and functional. His
platter has a wonderful swirled pattern
etched into the glaze.
Particularly energetic brushwork can be
found in works by Watson and fellow
Burlington ceramicist Jane Kramer. Watson
has hung three platters that have an
Abstract Expressionist bias portrayed in
olive green, blues and gray. Kramer produced
a low-fired, purely sculptural piece that
stands like a screen about 20 inches high.
Its glossy surface covers painterly passages
of sienna, indigo and grays.
Not all the potters in the exhibition were
officially Okino students. According to
Emily Rossheim's statement, he allowed
"unregistered students to use the facilities
in exchange for a commitment to help
maintain and run the shop." As such,
Rossheim didn't receive direct instruction
from Okino, but benefited from the "clay
culture" of his studio. Her vessels here
seem too delicate to be functional; one
large bowl has a fiery red interior and
turquoise exterior, with rows of rhythmic
dashes over its shell-like surface.
Works by Okino have a prominent place in the
exhibition, and they are testaments to his
creativity. Organic forms abound, and parts
of their surfaces are left unglazed. One
tall, vertical piece seems like a Miro form
sprung to life. Its surface has been
actively worked, and unconventional foreign
matter seems to have been tossed onto it
before firing.
Other forms are more traditional, perhaps
even functional. All of them demonstrate
that Okido definitely knew what each piece
"was about."
Hideo Okino worked under Toshiko Takaezu, a
Japanese-American sculptor who is now
recognized as one of the leading figures in
20th-century ceramics. In turn, Takaezu's
mentor in graduate school during the 1950s
was Maija Grotell (1904-1991), another of
the greats. If the Living/Learning Gallery
exhibit is any indication, that
distinguished lineage is continuing.