Artists Statement
Since my earliest days of experimenting with sculptural forms I have felt inspired by the natural environment that surrounds me. My spirit resonates particularly with the unfulfilled promise of newly turned rich earth, its texture and its sense of confident anticipation. Clay, possessing similar qualities, never fails to excite my inclination towards artistic expression.
Being an artist, a gardner and a lover of the great outdoors I am often drawn to the natural world and it's inhabitants as constant sources of inspiration and enjoyment. In recent years I have come to realize that much of the quiet and pristine New England woods and farm land which I draw insight and creative stimulation from are either completely gone or are targeted to be radically transformed by unchecked development. Very possibly soon to be lost forever. I have always felt the desire to work reflections of this vanishing landscape into my subject matter. My most recent work combines ceramic sculpture with various painted supports. Stylized sculpted and glazed clay blossoms take the stage as as symbolic rays of hope and optimism. The painted surfaces which surround them present darker and often tumultuously chaotic crowded landscapes. Some pieces simply let the blossoms exist on their own, allowing the viewer to explore the beauty and promise of the unspoiled forms with their iconic message of hope and possibility.
After graduating from Massachusetts College of Art in 1979 I began a business partnership with my mom, Nancy Mott. Our company, Clay Matter, was a clay studio which created one of a kind functional birdhouses, birdbaths and garden furniture. My husband Hans Schaefer, a Rhode Island School of Design graduate, provided his talents and expertise to facilitate the production aspects of many of these pieces. Marketing through the American Craft Council positioned my work in numerous high quality galleries, museums and exhibitions around the world.
In 1995 I turned my focus to raising my two sons, August and Angus, teaching at Dean College in Franklin MA and making one of a kind ceramic sculpture. I have been an active member of the board of directors for the Attleboro Arts Museum for the past 23 years and have always loved being active in and supporting the visual arts.