MARTIN PEARCE | Allusive Forms. In conversation with Contemporary Ceramics

Martin Pearce

Martin Pearce makes sculptures that reference shapes found in the natural world. He talks about the trees and landscape close to the coast where he lives as being important points of reference. His biomorphic shapes are handbuilt using Earthstone white stoneware clay. Pearce's starting point; a contoured slab of stoneware, is carefully draped over a chosen three-dimensional object. Working intuitively, he coils and manipulates the clay responding directly to the developing form.

In the run-up to his exhibition, Allusive Forms, at Contemporary Ceramics, we've been speaking with Martin to discover more about his journey with clay.

Contemporary Ceramics: Why do you do what you do.

Martin Pearce:  Being a quiet sort of chap, I was drawn to activities through which I could express myself by creating objects. One of the great things about ceramics is that all of the aspects of design and creation are, at least theoretically, up to you. 
Martin Pearce | 
CC: How did you first get involved in working with clay?

MP: My father had an interest in ceramics and, when I was 10, he helped me throw my first pot. Though not often repeated, this had a big effect on me. On the rather flimsy basis of enjoying sketching as a teenager, I was accepted into art college where I studied interior design. For many years, I harboured the idea of making with clay but kept my interest going through collecting ceramics instead. Inevitably, I started experimenting, using a tiny kiln and the corner of a room. When disaster struck and a fire destroyed my interior design archives and information library, I took the hint, and set about teaching myself the dark arts of the ceramicist. That was ten years ago, and I still have a long way to go. 

Martin Pearce | 
CC: How do you work?

MP: I am not much of a morning person, so I have to rely on unthinking routine. Once I am in the studio, with the radio playing music that I don’t have to listen to, and I have found pots that really need to be rescued right now, I can start work (or play, as I call it). I begin work with an idea of the finished piece, perhaps even a sketch, but then I work intuitively. I normally have two or three pieces to work on, different in scale or intention, to keep my thinking fresh. When it is time to decorate a batch of pieces, the studio is reorganised to give me plenty of spatter space. Many pieces have slips flicked and dripped onto them, and I tend to disregard the consequences of my actions as I work. My studio walls are a mess.

CC: What images keep you company in the space where you work? 

MP: I never have images that are relevant to my work. I find them too distracting and interfere with my train of thought. 

Martin Pearce |

CC: In what way has the process of making a new body of work for this exhibition influenced your practice?

MP: I have had to introduce a new level of discipline and forward planning, to create a cohesive body of work.

CC: How has your practice changed over time?

MP: Having established a basic visual language for my work, I have moved from making vessel-based forms to essentially closed sculptural forms. Surface treatments have become quieter to emphasise the importance of form. 

Martin Pearce |
CC: What was the first piece of art that really mattered to you?

MP: It wasn’t a single piece, but rather a movement that opened doors for me. The work of the New York Expressionists taught me that emotion and narrative were possible without figuration. The inner mind could communicate directly.

CC: You write that you don’t intend representation in your work. Are there material qualities or aesthetic concerns that drive this approach? 

MP: Direct representation doesn’t interest me. Abstraction concentrates the idea, and provokes the imagination. When presented with a representational piece, it is obvious what it is. What it means is all too often not considered. 
Martin Pearce

CC: How does working with clay influence your life beyond the workshop?

MP: I am always half looking for shapes and compositions that could extend the visual language of my work. I don’t sketch what I see, I prefer to remember and interpret the impression. 

CC: What role does the potter/ceramist have in the 21st Century? 

MP: Potters/ceramists, and all makers, have the opportunity to enhance people’s lives. Whether it is the creation of pure beauty, enlightenment, or the physical enjoyment of use, makers can provide points of stillness in an otherwise turbulent world. 


Martin Pearce | Allusive Forms
Contemporary Ceramics
17th October - 9th November 2019


Comments

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  2. Art is a line around your thoughts. MP has rightly pointed that abstraction concentrates the idea, and provokes the imagination. Check for more such items.

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  3. Thank you for sharing such informative article.Love to read more.Its all about the perspective of our thought that we observer

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