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Sculpture

Shelter

Joan McNeil // 1989

Earthenware
City Hall

Shelter is a small earthenware sculpture. It’s scale draws the viewer near, and forces him or her to relate to the piece on an personal level. The textural qualities of the clay are embraced by the artist, helping achieve a strong sense of materiality and visually rewarding the person who goes up close to experience the artwork.

According to artist Joan McNeill, I think a pot should have something dark, something light, with contrast supplied by colour, edges, or surface texture. These are essential human qualities as well, and I want my work to express warmth and humanness. I am not too rigorous about achieving perfection; a certain amount of discord or irregularity seems compatible with the nature of clay and doing studio work.”

Shelter, as suggested by the name, represents a building upon a high foundation of strata resembling sedimentary rock. It also functions as a vessel, illustrating the artist’s interest in exploring the concepts of interior vs exterior.

City Hall