Archive for August, 2009

Meet our Columbia Artist - Emily Nickel: ceramicist, sculptress, fashionista

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009
Emily Nickel.

Emily Nickel.


I am Emily Nickel and I am a Missouri- based ceramic artist. I feel a profound connection with clay, as working with clay represents a certain connection to the earth. It is an honest and versatile medium, with a long, rich history that I am excited to take part in. However, despite clay’s humble beginnings, it can be made into objects of the greatest luxury and extravagance. I enjoy taking this adaptable material and transforming it into elaborate “couture” pieces for the modern table.
Sprout.

Sprout.


I take inspiration from great architecture from both the East and the West and blend it all together to form my own unique style. I am also motivated by the idea of “comprehensive dining.” That is, when enjoying a meal or beverage, as many senses as possible should be stimulated. Enjoying tea, for example, is as much about the appreciation of the tea’s flavor as it is about the admiration of the teapot. As well as believing that dining is enriched by art, I also believe that art is enriched by dining: that by coming off of the pedestal and onto the table, the art takes on a an entirely new and more personal level of meaning.
Emily's stamped ceramic earrings.

Emily's stamped ceramic earrings.


When I’m not creating table ware, making jewelry is a fun way for me to play fashionista for awhile and give the clay yet another interesting role to play. I take inspiration from various international arts such as Japanese kimonos, Indian saris and Moorish tile work. I also draw plenty of inspiration from adornments in the natural world such as feathers and leaves. Finally, I also sculpt. Sculpture is the art form I use to express my great wonder and appreciation of the natural world, and my concern about its citizens. Like in my functional work, I love to spend my time on detailed, intricate creations full of texture, color, and life.
Nesting.

Nesting.

Meet our Missouri Artists - Janice Ho: our jewelry artiste, gardener, chef, obsessive knitter, do-it-yourself home renovator, and did I forget anything?

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

The glorious JAnice and her hand-knit sweater.

The glorious JAnice and her hand-knit sweater.


I met Barb in 2005 at one of my very first art fairs in Ann Arbor, MI. Poppy became my first, best, and favorite gallery to work with! I had been to Columbia before and was glad to have a connection to it again. However, at the time I had no idea my path would someday lead me to living in Missouri just a couple hours away.

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Hannibal has become a little arts community drawing people working in all kinds of mediums from big cities all over the country. The folks who land here all have one thing in common: they fall in love with the old houses and buildings and have a need to make one or two or three of those place their own! The renovations made to formerly condemned or maybe just forgotten spaces has turned some of these buildings into works of art themselves.

The studio in the house that Janice and Joachim (re)built.

The studio in the house that Janice and Joachim (re)built.

Our home here, built in 1874, sat empty for ten years with a collapsed roof, bowing walls, and soaking wet. The house next door burnt down almost as long ago. My partner bought both properties and spent the past few years turning it into a wonderland of studio and living space. We are at one end of the historic district, just a ten minute walk to historic Main Street and the Mississippi River.

My focus is on the garden. Every bit of lawn I see as potential veggie, flower or fruit plots. We’ve put in a lot of native plants as well – including hazelnuts and paw paws! Plants and natural themes have always been a major inspiration in my work, but outside of the studio, or really, just downstairs from my studio, I am particularly interested in where the plant world intersects my taste buds.

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Having lived for years in cities with wonderful restaurants, I never thought I could adjust to a town without Indian food! But in those cities, I worked all the time and ate out all the time because I never had time to cook. Now I cook all the time. My Swiss boyfriend eats only the crustiest of breads and I’m proud to say I’ve mastered it. I make my own paneer and naan when I crave Indian, fresh mozzarella to go with those heirloom tomatoes we’re growing, sorbets from local fruits, homemade pastas, and every pie crust is all butter. Special occasions get an entire day or two devoted to cooking for a single dinner (eight hours in the kitchen yesterday!), and amongst my friends, I am the dessert queen.

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So though I never knew I wasn’t a city girl, it took me moving to this little river town to find out. It’s a wonderful and growing little community here and if you’re ever in town, I’d love to show it to you. Poppy field trip, anyone?!