Emily Myers
Emily is currently working with both porcelain and red stoneware clay. These contrasting clays provide the bright white, and chocolate brown backgrounds, on which the glazes react. The potter’s wheel is central to Emily’s studio practice. However she is not limited to the circular nature of the thrown pot. She has extended her repertoire of forms by faceting, carving and altering the pots at the leather hard stage.
She has developed a range of matt stoneware barium glazes fired in an electric kiln. She aims to create well proportioned forms with subtle surfaces, that promote a feeling of tranquility.
After graduating with a degree in Ceramics from Bristol Polytechnic in 1987, Emily returned to her home town of London, and found she enjoyed working within a shared workshop environment, with other craftspeople.
A move to the countryside in the late 1990’s signalled a change in Emily’s work. Architectural influences gave way to organic ones. The rolling hills and ploughed furrows of North Hampshire were reflected in the carved lines within the pots. Inspiration was also drawn from found objects such as knapped flints and old metal cogs.
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