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Letters from a Collector to a Studio Potter

Pottery as Emotional Containers: What Role Does PASSION and the Other Human Emotions Have in Pottery and the Creative Process? – Part 1

I am assuming that all readers of this blog are fully consenting adults.  I would require some kind of identification and confirmation of your adult status before allowing you to read further but my meager knowledge of computers and the way they work forbid such regulation.  We have the generic question – what is the role of passion in the creative process, in the arts, and in pottery in particular?  I will try to restrain myself and maintain my decorum and not embarrass myself or any reader of this blog in leading this particular discussion.  Passion in the widest definition of that term would mean any behavior or state of being that demonstrated great intensity of feeling, an exuberant emotional state that can take on physical and emotional dimensions in terms of aroused or celebratory behavior.

The Art of Passion

I am trying very hard to think of any passionate potters I know, but perhaps that emotion was thought best displayed elsewhere and not in my presence.  Can the pot show passion if the potter cannot?  What form does passion take both in the making of the object and in the final artifact that comes out of it?  Can passion be an innocent emotion devoid of sensuality or is passion displayed outside sexuality a very poor substitute or sublimation for the real thing?  I do hope you are prepared for this discussion.  Please put away anything that might distract you and really concentrate on helping me through this blog.  I might be mistaken but I do believe I have some very passionate pots in my pottery gallery.  It would be rude of you to inquire if this very old man responds in kind.  A lot of people think passion is an unseemly emotion for old people to display in any form or kind.

Passion’s Longevity

Is passion an ordinary emotion that all of us display in doing what we love to do?  I am a passionate gardener though I doubt that this emotion is visible when I garden.  Surely someone can see me every morning in the front garden, look at the spectacular, blooming results of my devotion, and realize my emotional investment.  First if all, there is a level of caring in passion, then joy in performing that function or performance, and finally results external to you that you are responsible for and fully justify your efforts.  I think all of us can locate in our lives such attitudes and activities.  Can such a demanding emotion in terms of energy and focus deteriorate into automatic habit?  Can you really spend years of your life with that soggy clay getting your hands dirty on the wheel and yet declare your continuing passion with that experience?  Sadly, we know that passion can dissipate and die when associated with other human beings, that has often been the stuff of great poetry. Can it also fade and decline in those things you do that once brought you the greatest joy?  How do you protect and preserve passion – with both people and pottery?

Can’t any burst of passion directed toward those objects and subjects of desire become a potential source of great pain and loss if that source of desire is not accessible or obtainable?  Isn’t it safer to play it cool, not get too invested, not to take a chance?  Doesn’t passion have to be in some sense reciprocal in order to bring personal satisfaction?  My garden, in late Spring, is now giving me, in return for my loving attention, the most beautiful and glorious flowers.  You have to take a risk when committing to your passions, and the outcome is always in doubt.  The bedrock of all passions is the fundamental passion for life itself.  I still have it though it has been severely tested at times during my life.

Creativity and Control

When applied to the creative process, does passion lead to innovation and vivid expression or does it distort the artifact by its excess?  Don’t most potters believe that they have to control the entire process, plan and design the result, ensure that everything remains predictable and reliable?  Doesn’t passion mean at least a partial loss of control; letting go and allowing previously unknown and unruly feelings play a role in the creative process?  Isn’t the very idea of mastery in craft defined by the conscious management of a supreme skill, which allows no irrational deviation?  How can you combine skill and passion?  Aren’t they very unlikely partners at the potter’s wheel?

Passion in the Past

Let us first examine the relationship of passion to sexuality and relate that to pottery.  If we go back to classical Greece, we can see vivid portrayals of nude men and boys on some of their pottery.  I remember taking a group of high schools students to the Getty Museum in Malibu, CA many years ago and walking them through the galleries that contained nude sculptures and pottery.  Sure enough, it didn’t take a few of the adolescent boys very long to locate that pottery that illustrated the aroused affection of those ancient Greeks of long ago.  As for Classical sculpture and contemporary pottery in regard to eroticism, this was what I said in my book, “Searching for Beauty: Letters from a Collector to a Studio Potter”, about this matter, ending with a quote from a book by Paul Mathieu,

“The nose and the penis are always the first to go.  Fortunately contemporary ceramics are replenishing the latter.  A quick perusal of the classical collection of Greek and Roman sculpture confirms my observation.  I have just finished “Sex Pots: Eroticism in Ceramics” by Paul Mathieu.  I hide the book from my grandchildren and guests, bringing back warm memories of the surreptitious concealment of certain magazines and illustrations in my adolescence.  I have obviously underestimated up to now just how exciting ceramics really can be.  I browse the book, with ceramic evidence of projected penis and dented vulva on countless objects across history and cultures.  I do continue to be concerned about the future durability of contemporary works with potentially vulnerable appendages.  I fully appreciate the importance of pottery and clay objects in human ritual and the analogous references to the human body in the form and function of ceramic vessels that connect ceramics to human sexuality.  Mathieu further explains this idea:

‘…ceramic objects and human bodies remain basically interchangeable as the metaphorical level, but also through somatic analogies within forms and parts.  Pottery forms are presentations, abstractly, of human bodies.  Through touch and direct contact, they are experienced intimately by bodies, and their inherent functions mimic as well as support bodily functions.  This emphasis on tactile aspects, on physical touch, differentiates objects from images, which operate solely at the visual level.’”

Admittedly, this is a major departure from the serving of tea in fashionable 18th and 19th century drawing rooms with an elegant porcelain teapot and delicate cups and saucers, all hand painted with bright periwinkles or other such pretty flowers.  We have established, both in classical culture and in contemporary ceramics, that pottery has been employed to portray human sexuality as inspired by the primal emotion of passion.  We simply cannot label these historical references of thousands of years of human civilization as obscene or vulgar.  Many are sublime homage’s to the regenerative capacity of humans to reproduce and others are in themselves ritual objects of that same fertility capacity as symbol and metaphor.

Passion – Gender Specific?

At one time in Western culture it was thought that the very existence, much less the expression, of passion was strictly a man’s prerogative.  In the same sense, it was once thought that women were reluctant participants in sexual activity, the price they had to pay for domestic stability and the attainment of motherhood and family.  Women who did demonstrate passion were thought limited to those who had become fallen women, devoid of respectability and not the type who married but were kept in another capacity.  We have largely forsaken these sexist notions in our society but the residue of these attitudes still haunts us today.  It is particularly ironic that women were once thought inherently emotional and thus inherently unstable.  Yet the one emotion they supposedly lacked by their very nature was the emotion of passion. In contrast, men were allowed to be emotional in their display of passion as an integral part of their manhood but socialized to suppress all the other emotions as unmanly.  When you think about it, this cultural construction of the emotional makeup of humans by gender didn’t make any sense for either men or women.

In the next blog I will continue this discussion.

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4 Responses to “Pottery as Emotional Containers: What Role Does PASSION and the Other Human Emotions Have in Pottery and the Creative Process? – Part 1”

  1. Ahoy Richard!

    So glad you are continuing the blog! As usual you put forth some provocative issues. I just posted something on my blog that is slightly tangential to this topic here. I’d love for you to check it out. The title is “The unbearable lightness of being a potter”.

    What I’d say specifically in response to this post is that you are definitely onto something in contrasting the difference between exercise of skill and exercise of passion. This was a good statement of the difference: “Doesn’t passion mean at least a partial loss of control; letting go and allowing previously unknown and unruly feelings play a role in the creative process? Isn’t the very idea of mastery in craft defined by the conscious management of a supreme skill, which allows no irrational deviation? How can you combine skill and passion? Aren’t they very unlikely partners at the potter’s wheel?”

    Unrestrained passion does seem to be at odds with the technical precision that most potters bring to the wheel. But I think this merely hides where their passion has found its new home. As you had already stated, passion is really about the things we care for, our emotional investment, and the potential for joy to be found. It doesn’t need to be unrestrained. That is only one narrow manifestation of a highly nuanced condition of caring, emotional investment, and joy. There is not only one way of feeling these things. Its not always a pot on the boil, a conflagration of fireworks. Those are just the most easily observed. Our passions can also be the slow and steady burn of an evolving romance.

    And because what it takes to make (and sell) our work is a mixed bag, potters can feel ambivalent about some aspects, and even loathe other parts of the process. I don’t know many professional potters who enjoy all of what they are required to do. But its our commitment to and devotion to those things we are passionate about that sustains our practice. We put up with the rest sometimes as necessary evils. We can love firing a wood kiln but hate chopping and hauling the slabs of wood that make it possible. We can love the forming of shapes with wet clay, but not get excited by waiting for them to dry or loading up a bisque kiln. We can love unloading a glaze kiln where we get to enjoy the surprises and serendipity of our finished results, but we can struggle to feel anything but dread about the actual process of putting glaze on the surface. We can get kind of bored repeating the same form over and over (because this is what the market seems to require from us), but we can we!
    igh that against the moments of creative inspiration that let us simply play with the materials and discover new and fascinating things. And its different for each of us. What I enjoy some other potter surely hates doing.

    In other words, passion seems to find its way into our work from many angles and through many parts of the process. Its never all or nothing. Its not a simple proposition. And the passion itself can be as varied and variable depending on all those things. Our own moods can affect our passions. What more contingent and fluctuating condition is there than that?

    In the end, I would say that passion is important not because it expresses a particular type of connection to the world but that it is a manifestation of caring. This is what we believe in. This is what we dream. And all the nuance that makes us different as individuals also plays out in how we are passionate and what we are passionate for. But the important thing is that we care. A world where we have lost the ability to care would be a terrible thing. The important thing is that we DO find joy, that we DO have emotional investment.

    And I would argue that it is through our own creative abilities that we are most in touch with that caring. Making a garden is one such thing. Collecting pots is one such thing. Building a life together with your family is one such thing. In each of those we have added something new and different to the world. And it is our devotion to those things that helps make the world a more livable place, more pregnant with value, more pregnant with meaning. It is because we can still dream of better things that passion survives. It is because we are open to the mystery and possibility of the world that passion still has a place in our lives.

    Well, that’s how it looks to me, at least…..

    Thanks for another great post!
    -Carter

  2. Richard Jacobs says:

    Carter,

    I am once more pleased that I caught your interest with this blog and you took the time and effort to contact me. I always enjoy your comments. Caring and joy are both precious and precarious emotions – well earned rewards but always in jepardy. I caught a little bit of that difficulty when I did indeed check out your blog and read “The unbearable lightness of being a potter.” It is ironic but the more you care the more threatened the joy in your life becomes. A poor selling exhibit of your pottery can sour your soul and discourage you when you next approach the potter’s wheel. As you said, parts of everyone’s existence involves those things you must do that you loathe as well as those you embrace.

    I fully agree with your summary of all this, that we all create our lives in various and diverse ways. Devotion and caring are primary emotional investments that allow constructive release of our energy and passions. We could just read the morning newspaper or hear the evening news on TV and find a thousand excuses not to care but rather to surrender, to give up. I audit the world each day through various media, grieve and mourn the bombings, wars, starvation, massacres, the whole bloody world seems on the edge of doom – and yet I will not give up hope. To make a pot is to say yes to life rather than death, yes to creating instead of destroying, yes to the dreams and passions that get you up each morning. We must experience both sorrow and joy – all at the same time. As life cannot have real meaning without the conscious awareness of death – the joys of life cannot provide intense pleasures if you do not mourn the loss and dark side of all human existence. I really like that last line of yours – “It is because we are open to the mystery and possibility of the world that passion still has a place in our lives.” Each of us are on a journey to find meaning in our lives. I must say, Carter, that you are very good company in what seems to be a common path we are taking in so many ways. That is one good reason for me to write this blog. It is important to me to know that I am not alone and that my longings and passions are shared with others. I hope your next pottery sale sells out.

    Take care,

    Richard

  3. carter says:

    I too am glad for your company, Richard! So nice to have made your acquaintance here and with your thoughts presented in your letters to Christa. And I’m so glad that you choose to express your passion for pottery and life in this blog.

    I firmly believe that what we do with our lives adds to the world. Caring almost always adds to its lightness, and we encourage lightness within others with our sharing and with our example. Your book and your blog has made a difference to me. You have made a difference to me, Richard. Thank you so much for sharing the journey!

    All the best,

    Carter

  4. Richard Jacobs says:

    Dear Carter,

    Thank you for your most positive response. I do enjoy writing and most enjoy writing this blog for Laguana Clay. I just finished another letter to Octavio Paz, the deceased Mexican poet that I have been writing to for the last two years. It is my 30th letter to him and I discuss just what you were talking about in this response, about what you do makes a difference and that those involved in cultural activities have a moral duty to try to enrich the lives of people through their work. I also talk about the impact of commerce in reducing the artifact to a commodity and the contemporary attitude in the arts to treat the observer with contempt in attempting to shock and offend them with deliberately vulgar and sensational work. Let me know and I will be happy to send it on to you. Thanks again for your support. It makes a difference for me.

    Richard

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