New Mexico Potters and Clay Artists
NMPCA Studio Tour

Studio Tour

Marc Hudson

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Lee Akins
Cricket Appel
Amber Archer
Michelle Arterburn
Karin N. Bergh
Elaine Biery
Kathryn Blackmun
Joe Bova
SheenaCameron
Tamara Cameron
Barbara Campbell
Dan Cappacio
David Conrad
Kathryne Cyman
Sara Lee D'Alessandro
Mary Sharp Davis
JoAnne DeKeuster
Kevin DeKeuster
Elizabeth Donsbach
Adel Devalcourt
Gloria Gilmore House
Carolyn Efner
Liz Fiset
Eileen Gorman
Philip Green
Barbara Harnack
Sandra Harrington
Theo Helmstadter
Alexis Higginbotham
Cheryl Hoagland
Marc Hudson
Linda R. Kastner
Daisy Kates
Barbara King
Michael Lancaster
Jody Lentz
Misha Malpica
Lynne McCarthy
Karen K. Milstein
Darlene Nelson
Judy Nelson-Moore
Shel Neymark
Casey Pendergast
Mario Quilles
Judith Richey
Kari Rives
Elizabeth Rose
Anne Russell
John Sapienza
Abby Salsbury
Joey Serim
Carolyn Robbins Siegel
Barry Slavin
Cirrelda Snider-Bryan
Evan Speegle
Rusty Spicer
Grady Stem
Christina Sullo
Marilu Tejero
Kristin C. Thacher
Darla Graff Thompson
Michael Ray Thornton
Toni Trosky
Ann Trott
Layne Vickers Smith
Elaine Weaver-Spalek
Irene Renee Wiley
Frank Willett
Betsy Williams
Tomás R. Wolff

1106 Camino Vuelta
Española, New Mexico 87532
505.920.4401
Email: Info@marchudsonartgallery.com
website: marchudsonartgallery.com

Marc Hudson

Vase

Ash Glaze

14" tall

Funerary Urns

8" tall

 

Marc Hudson

Artist's Statement:

I live among the high desert chaparral, azure blue skies and rough stone outcroppings in Northern New Mexico, from which place I derive much of my inspiration and passion to work in clay.  I am self-taught and have been working with clay since 1970.  I have developed a repertoire of finely crafted extruded and wheel thrown decorative pieces.  I hope my work stirs you enough that you will want to look back at it often and contemplate its shape, texture, and color.  Perhaps you will connect a memory to it, offer it as a gift or keep it for yourself, but think of it as a cornerstone of an emotion, a recollection or a feeling and let it move you.

I become an alchemist when I stand in front of my shelves of glaze ingredients or table of clay. I imagine myself as a member of a very long line of artists and craftsmen whose ceramic innovation dates back more than 12,000 years, as far back as the last big Ice Age.
Wood ash particularly appeals to me as a primary ingredient because it is a bit of a "wild card," its effect somewhat unpredictable in a glaze. Ash likes to flow at high temperatures, yet its surface tension tries to make the glaze bead up -- like a struggle between control and abandonment.
My usual approach to clay is to exercise considerable control while it is on the wheel or in the extruder, so it is refreshing to let my guard down and let the glaze act and react serendipitously. Each time I open the kiln, I am surprised, thrilled, occasionally mystified, but always my clay work is a centering, learning, and inquisitive experience.

Marc Hudson
Basket with Cholla, 13" tall

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