New Mexico Potters and Clay Artists
NMPCA Studio Tour

Studio Tour

Ruth Weston

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

3028 Governor Lindsey Road
Santa Fe, NM 87505
505 424-8628
ruth@ruthweston.com
www.ruthweston.com

The Stephenson Gallery
238 Delgado Street (Just off Canyon Road)
Santa Fe, NM  87501
505 954-4822

Ruth Weston

Torso of a Young Boy

Clay sculpture, cone 5, glazed stoneware, reduction fired (gas kiln)

26”H x 14”W x 9”D

$3200.00 with pedestal

Weeping Philosopher

Clay sculpture, cone 5, glazed stoneware, reduction fired (gas kiln)

25”H x 14”W x 9”D

$3000.00 with pedestal

Ruth Weston

Artist's Statement:

I have been doing ceramic sculpture for many years now. My art training includes two years of study in Florence Italy; where I studied art history. In addition to my art training, I have studied ceramic engineering and have been an engineer for 22 years before returning to the arts. My unique background has given me a strong sense of aesthetics as well as a good understanding of my material. I make my own glazes, which gives a unique beauty to my sculpture’s surface, its texture and its color. My work is not mass-produced with editions; each piece is unique.

I have always been fascinated with the rich, ancient tradition of modeling the human figure in clay which is then baked into a permanent, hard material. Well preserved fertility figures have been discovered which were modeled as long ago as 4000 BC, in soft clay which was then baked. This ancient tradition has been kept alive in such ceramic art work as the pre-Columbian clay figures, the Etruscan baked clay sarcophagi and funerary jars, and the Italian Renaissance portraits.

I often work towards a more abstract figure which is conjured from the elegant but extreme position of the human body while dancing. For me the tension in the movement of dancers is like a mirror which reflects the stresses and youthful excitement of our modern and sometimes absurd existence. As did the ancient artists, I am using clay modeling of the human figure to reflect the culture in which I live.

I use stoneware clay which must be fired to a much higher temperature than the soft clays of the ancient artisan, and thus my figures are much more durable. But like the ancient artist, I use simple raw materials to color the clay surface before firing. I have developed my own glazes from raw oxides such as flint, nepholine syenite, and kaolin.

Ruth Weston Portrait
Back to NMPCA Main Page / ©2008 New Mexico Potters and Clay Artists. All images copyright of the respective artists. Contact Webmaster.