New Mexico Potters and Clay Artists

Studio Tour

NMPCA Studio Tour

Judith Richey

Cricket Appel
Michelle Arterburn
Karin N. Bergh
Elaine Biery
Kathryn Blackmun
Diane E. Botham
Tony Butler
Maxine Chelini
Kathryne Cyman
Sara Lee D'Alessandro
JoAnne DeKeuster
Kevin DeKeuster
Pamala S. Dean
Jay Dirago
Christine Evans
Karen Fielding
Joe Frey
Elizabeth Fritzsche
Philip Green
Sandra Harrington
Theo Helmstadter
Cheryl Hoagland
Marc Hudson
Z Jacobson
Linda R. Kastner
Daisy Kates
Michael Lancaster
Bari Lovewave
Rhonda Main
Lynne McCarthy
Karen K. Milstein
Darlene Nelson
Shel Neymark
Judy Nelson-Moore
Judith Richey
Kari Rives
Elizabeth Rose
Rita Ryan
Greta Ruiz
Abby Salsbury
Joey Serim
Carolyn Robbins Siegel
Mary Sharp Davis
Kristin C. Thacher
Michael Ray Thornton
Ann Trott
Layne Vickers Smith
Elaine Weaver-Spalek
Melanie Ann Wegner
Ruth Weston
Betsy Williams
Juanita Wolff
Tomás R. Wolff

6 Arroyo Bonito, Sandia Park, NM 87047
phone: 505-286-7993
Email: jrichey@sandia.net
website

Judith Richey  Judith Richey  Judith Richey  Judith Richey  Judith Richey  Judith Richey  Judith Richey  Judith Richey 
Judith Richey

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Judith Richey.

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Artist's Statement:

I began my journey in clay in 1972 at the De Young Museum Art School in San Francisco. My work developed with a definite influence from an Eastern Esthetic, as my first teacher, David Fugiama, instilled in me a careful attention to form, balance, special finishing details, glaze application, and firing.

Several years ago, I enrolled in a porcelain class being taught at the University of New Mexico by Kathryn Cyman, that had a special relationship with Manji Inoue Sensei, National Living Treasure in Porcelain, from Arita, Japan. The Arita method of Porcelain is a process of working with porcelain that is unlike anything I had ever attempted with clay. Special tools are used, the wheel turns clockwise, and trimming is an art in and of itself. . . . It is a difficult thing to change the way you work with clay after 28 years; in my case it was an incredible challenge. When I look at the pieces that I have made, I am humbled by the process, and excited by the results.

I still continue to work in stoneware as well as porcelain, and fire in a gas kiln in both oxidation and reduction environments.  My work is wheel thrown and hand built, and I enjoy carving designs into the clay.  I make all of my own glazes and often use brushwork decoration with gozu, a Japanese colorant, or with metallic oxides. An avid gardener, I recently created a line of garden beads, sculptural pieces comprised of individual elements stacked together in interesting arrangements.  They are wonderful complements to any garden environment.
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