Helen Shupla | ||
Birth Date: 1918 |
||
Death Date: 1985 Artist Gallery |
||
Helen Shupla is one of the few potters whose name has become synonymous with a particular pottery style; ‘the melon bowl.’ The ribs on her pieces are pushed out from the inside when the clay is wet. That is why there is often a slight turn to the ribs, as they are turned when she would twist her hand against the inside of the clay. As they are based on a natural form, they tend to have a very organic appearance. Helen crafted her pottery in the traditional manner of harvesting local clay, hand coiling, shaping, sanding, and polishing with a stone. Helen used traditional methods of firing her works in an open fire. You can find her work in museums such as the Heard Museum, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Brooklyn Museum, the National Museum of the American Indian, and the Denver Art Museum. She was also featured on the front cover of “Talking with the Clay.”
|
||