Jane Reumert
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[edit] overview
Jane Reumert
Jane Reumert was born in Denmark in 1942. Reumert has spent more than 40 years as a professional studio ceramic artist. She is one of Denmark’s most respected artists, and she has gained much international recognition. [1] Reumert’s work has many influences, but nature and calligraphy are “deep-rooted sources of inspiration”. In an interview she stated that as a child she was captivated with nature, with birds – and their nests, feathers and eggs. This acute observation of nature, especially of birds, is shown clearly in some of her more contemporary works that mimic eggs and feathers of birds. [2] She has also mastered the art of calligraphy, and uses lettering styles from the East to the West. In the late 1980’s she began working in porcelain. She began making paper-thin vessels, salt glazed, and fired to 1330 degrees Celsius (above 2300 F). In the early 1990s she began experimenting with the addition of fiberglass and other fibers added to her clay body, which enabled her to construct even thinner forms. She often displays her work on wire tripods, so the vessels appear to be floating above their shadows.[3] Reumert’s work is a great metaphor of the fragility of our existence. She has shown internationally, and has been awarded prizes for her work. Among these, in 1994, she was awarded Scandinavia’s most prestigious design prize: the Torsten and Wanja Soderberg Nordic Design Prize.[4] Reumert has published writings and books on ceramic techniques, as well as on her own work. She writes in Danish, but some of her books have been translated into other languages. Examples of these are her two books, Transparency and Contemporary Pottery. Recently Reumert has moved away from her home and studio on the island of Bornholm. She is now living and working close to Copenhagen. She is now using a wood-fired kiln, and has chosen to change from salt firings to soda firings. [5] Just this past summer she took part in the Nordic Woodfire Marathon, and was a guest artist at the International Ceramic Research Centre in Denmark.[6]
Links:
http://www.carlakoch.nl/kunstenaars/jreumert.html - images
[edit] References
- ^ www.pulsceramics.com
- ^ Bodil Busk Laurensen, "Jane Reumert's Fidelity to Ceramics," Ceramics: Art and Perception, No. 62, 2005, pp. 20-24.
- ^ www.pulsceramics.com
- ^ Bodil Busk Laurensen, "Jane Reumert's Fidelity to Ceramics," Ceramics: Art and Perception, No. 62, 2005, pp. 20-24.
- ^ http:pulsceramics.com
- ^ http:woodfiremarathon2007.blogspot.com
Bodil Busk Laurensen, “Jane Reumert’s Fidelity to Ceramics,” Ceramics: Art and Perception, No. 62, 2005, pp. 20-24.