Alasdair Neil Macdonell – Stoneware Face (New In)

£1,499

Description

Alasdair Neil Macdonell – Stoneware Face

Artist: Alasdair Neil Macdonell

Type: a stoneware two faced form on a rectangular base, impressed ANM mark

Size: 33cm Tall

Alasdair Neil Macdonell – Stoneware Face

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Alasdair Neil MacDonell works from his studio in Bath, Somerset. Using cobalt, copper and iron oxide under stoneware glazes, he makes a range of forms centred on faces.

“My Father was an architect and my two sisters and I had a lot of exposure to the arts and crafts, particularly old buildings! I remember becoming aware of the creative effects of fire when a neighbours wooden garage containing an ancient ash framed van caught fire. When extinguished there stood a fascinating labyrinth of standing charcoal. When I first started working with clay at college it was the transformation of materials during firing that held me in thrall – it still does. As an art teacher I began working with clay in the classroom. The necessity of devising modelling and handbuilding projects, and the uninhibited and energetic originality shown by my pupils opened my eyes to the potential of the material as an expressive and figurative medium. After 4 years I returned to college to work with clay as my main subject for a Bachelor of Education degree, becoming specialist ceramics teacher, head of department and occasional college lecturer.

During 22 years of teaching and making he was given the opportunity to travel across USA to explore American ceramics. He also received a British Council Award to teach in America. Ironically these experiences were to be so positive that they led to Neil leaving the profession to make his own work full time. He settled in Bath in 1992 and was soon joined in his studio by Sally MacDonell.”

“As a 6 year old visiting the Egyptian rooms in the British Museum I was overwhelmed by the textures, patterns and sinister esoteric nature of the mummified remains. I remain interested in disguise and concealment as expressed in primitive cultures and the way that the damage found in archaeological artefacts speaks of their history. My fascination with the human face has made it an obvious choice as a focus for my ideas, though I am conscious of how difficult it is to avoid clichés and pastiche. Yet it is the ubiquity of images of the face throughout the history of humankind that draws me to them.”

His work can be found in public and private collections in UK, Europe and America.  

 

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